Adhyaya 27 — Madālasa’s Instruction to King Alarka: Royal Ethics, Self-Conquest, and Statecraft
कीटकस्य क्रियां कुर्यात् विपक्षे मनुजेश्वरः ।
चेष्टां पिपीलिकानाञ्च काले भूपः प्रदर्शयेत् ॥
kīṭakasya kriyāṃ kuryāt vipakṣe manujeśvaraḥ | ceṣṭāṃ pipīlikānāñ ca kāle bhūpaḥ pradarśayet ||
دشمن کے مقابلے میں انسانوں کے سردار کو چھوٹے سے کیڑے کے بھی طریقے اختیار کرنے چاہئیں؛ اور مناسب وقت پر بادشاہ کو چیونٹیوں جیسی مقصدی سرگرمی دکھانی چاہیے۔
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No tactic is ‘too small’ for statecraft: minute, persistent, well-timed actions can overcome stronger opponents. The stress on kāla highlights that virtue and strategy must be applied with discernment, not impulsively.
Normative instruction (dharma/nīti), ancillary to the Purāṇic fivefold.
The ‘insect’ and ‘ant’ symbolize subtlety and collective persistence—an inner teaching that small, repeated disciplines (saṃskāras) reshape destiny when applied at the right psychological moment (kāla).