Aṣṭāvakra–Kahoda Upākhyāna: Śvetaketu’s Āśrama, Sarasvatī, and the Origin of Aṣṭāvakra
श्येन उवाच न वराहं न चोक्षाणं न मृगान् विविधांस्तथा । भक्षयामि महाराज कि ममान्येन केनचित्
śyena uvāca na varāhaṃ na cokṣāṇaṃ na mṛgān vividhāṃs tathā | bhakṣayāmi mahārāja ki mamānyena kenacit ||
باز بولا—اے مہاراج! میں نہ جنگلی سؤر کھاتا ہوں، نہ بیل، نہ طرح طرح کے ہرن۔ پھر مجھے کسی اور خوراک کی کیا حاجت؟
श्येन उवाच
The verse highlights svadharma (one’s own nature-bound duty): a predator’s sustenance is tied to its inherent role, raising an ethical tension between compassion and the natural order.
The hawk addresses a king and asserts that it does not eat large game like boar, ox, or various deer, implying that it seeks a different, specific prey and rejects alternative substitutes.