Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 13

Dvaipāyana–Kīṭa Saṃvāda: Karmic Memory, Fear of Death, and Embodied Pleasure

रसं च प्रतिजिह्नाया ज्ञान प्रज्ञायते यथा । तथा शास्त्रेषु नियतं रागो ह्यास्वादिताद्‌ भवेत्‌

rasaṃ ca pratijihvāyā jñānaṃ prajñāyate yathā | tathā śāstreṣu niyataṃ rāgo hy āsvāditād bhavet ||

بھیشم نے کہا—جس طرح زبان کسی ذائقے کو پہچانتے ہی فطری طور پر اس کی طرف کھنچ جاتی ہے، اسی طرح شاستروں میں یہ بات مقرر ہے کہ جس چیز کا ذائقہ چکھا اور بھوگا جائے، اسی سے لگاؤ پیدا ہوتا ہے۔ لہٰذا حواس کے موضوعات میں بار بار انہماک—مثلاً گوشت کا مزہ—خواہش کو بجھاتا نہیں بلکہ بڑھا دیتا ہے۔

{'rasa (रस)''taste
{'rasa (रस)':
relish (also ‘aesthetic relish’ in other contexts)', 'jihvā (जिह्वा)''tongue', 'pratijihvāyāḥ (प्रतिजिह्वायाः)': 'of/for the tongue in relation to taste (contextual: ‘with respect to the tongue’)', 'jñānam (ज्ञानम्)': 'cognition
relish (also ‘aesthetic relish’ in other contexts)', 'jihvā (जिह्वा)':
awareness', 'prajñāyate (प्रज्ञायते)''is understood/recognized
awareness', 'prajñāyate (प्रज्ञायते)':
becomes known', 'yathā (यथा)''just as', 'tathā (तथा)': 'so
becomes known', 'yathā (यथा)':
in the same way', 'śāstreṣu (शास्त्रेषु)''in the scriptures
in the same way', 'śāstreṣu (शास्त्रेषु)':
in authoritative teachings', 'niyatam (नियतम्)''fixed
in authoritative teachings', 'niyatam (नियतम्)':
certain', 'rāgaḥ (रागः)''attachment
certain', 'rāgaḥ (रागः)':
craving', 'hi (हि)''indeed
craving', 'hi (हि)':
for', 'āsvāditāt (आस्वादितात्)''from what has been tasted/enjoyed', 'bhavet (भवेत्)': 'arises
for', 'āsvāditāt (आस्वादितात्)':

भीष्म उवाच

B
Bhishma
T
tongue (jihvā)
T
taste (rasa)
S
scriptures (śāstra)

Educational Q&A

Enjoyment of sense-objects tends to generate and intensify attachment (rāga). Therefore, ethical discipline recommends restraint: repeated tasting and indulgence do not satisfy desire; they condition the mind toward further craving.

In Anuśāsana Parva, Bhishma continues instructing on dharma and right conduct. Here he uses a simple analogy—how the tongue becomes attracted after tasting—to explain a broader scriptural principle about how attachment forms through sensory experience.