भीष्मरक्षण-प्रकरणम् / The Protective Screen around Bhīṣma and the Śalya–Yudhiṣṭhira Clash
उक्तोडसि बहुशो राजन् नारदाद्यर्महर्षिभि: । त्वं तु मोहान्न जानीषे वाच्यावाच्यं सुयोधन
ukto ’si bahuśo rājan nāradādyair maharṣibhiḥ | tvaṃ tu mohān na jānīṣe vācyāvācyaṃ suyodhana ||
三阇耶说道:“大王啊,诸大圣仙——那罗陀等——已多次将此事告诫于你。然而为迷妄所蔽,苏由陀那啊,你竟不能分辨何者当言,何者不当言。”
संजय उवाच
Repeated wise counsel is useless if one is overcome by moha (delusion). Ethical discernment includes knowing what is fit to say (vācya) and what is unfit to say (avācya), especially for a ruler whose words shape action and conflict.
Sañjaya rebukes Suyodhana (Duryodhana), reminding him that sages like Nārada have warned him many times. Despite these admonitions, Duryodhana remains deluded and fails to distinguish proper from improper speech—signaling his moral obstinacy in the lead-up to war.