Dāna-Śreṣṭhatā: On the Superiority of Giving
Maitreya–Vyāsa Exemplum
भीष्मजी कहते हैं--राजन्! कीड़ेके ऐसा कहनेपर व्यासजीने उससे पूछा--“कीट! तुम्हे सुख कहाँ है?” मेरी समझमें तो तुम्हारा मर जाना ही तुम्हारे लिये सुखकी बात है; क्योंकि तुम तिर्यक् योनि--अधम कीट-योनिमें पड़े हो ।।
Bhīṣma uvāca—rājan, kīṭenaivaṃ ukte Vyāsena tam apṛcchat—“kīṭa, te sukhaṃ kutra?” mama mate tu tava maraṇam eva te śreyaḥ; yasmāt tvaṃ tiryag-yoniṃ—adhamāṃ kīṭa-yoniṃ—prāptaḥ. śabdaṃ sparśaṃ rasaṃ gandhaṃ bhogāṃś coccāvacān bahūn | nābhijānāsi kīṭa tvaṃ śreyo maraṇam eva te ||
毗湿摩说道:“大王啊,那虫子如此言说时,毗耶娑便问它:‘虫啊,你的快乐在哪里?’依我之见,死亡本身对你更好,因为你堕入了畜生之生——卑贱的虫身。你并不真正知晓声、触、味、香,也不识诸多大小乐受;因此,对你而言,唯有死亡才是更佳之途。”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse contrasts the ideal of ‘śreyas’ (true good) with mere existence in a degraded condition. It suggests that when a life-form is trapped in a low, limited embodiment with little access to conscious experience and higher aims, mere survival is not automatically the highest good; rather, liberation from that condition (here expressed starkly as death) is presented as preferable. Ethically, it pushes the listener to reflect on what counts as genuine welfare beyond sensory pleasure.
Bhishma recounts a dialogue: a worm speaks, and Vyasa responds by questioning where the worm’s happiness could be, given its low birth. Vyasa then argues that the worm cannot truly enjoy the sensory objects—sound, touch, taste, smell, and varied pleasures—so he concludes that death would be better for it than continuing in such a constrained state.