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Shloka 266

Aśmagīta: Janaka’s Inquiry on Loss, Kāla, and the Limits of Control (अश्मगीता)

दृश्यते चाप्यतिक्रामन्ननिग्राह्मो5थवा पुनः । कोई इस सेतुका उल्लंघन करता दिखायी नहीं देता अथवा पहले भी किसीने इसका उल्लंघन किया हो

dṛśyate cāpyatikrāmann anigrāhyo ’thavā punaḥ |

阇那迦说:“通常看不见有人逾越那既定的界限(setu);也不常听闻古人曾破此界。然则偶尔,有人桀骜难制——凭借苦行等强大的自力,不再受命运所拘——也会被看见跨越那道界限。”

{'dṛśyate''is seen, is observed', 'ca api': 'and also, moreover', 'atikrāman / atikrāmati': 'crossing over, transgressing, overstepping', 'setu (implied by context)': 'boundary, bridge
{'dṛśyate':
a regulating limit or moral ‘embankment’ that prevents disorder', 'anigrāhyaḥ''not to be restrained, not controllable, not amenable to discipline', 'athavā punaḥ': 'or again
a regulating limit or moral ‘embankment’ that prevents disorder', 'anigrāhyaḥ':
alternatively, on the other hand', 'daiva (contextual)''fate, destiny, the force of what is ordained', 'puruṣārtha (contextual)': 'human effort/initiative
alternatively, on the other hand', 'daiva (contextual)':

जनक उवाच

J
Janaka

Educational Q&A

Moral and cosmic order (the ‘setu’) is generally stable and not easily violated; however, exceptional individuals—through intense self-effort and discipline—may transcend ordinary constraints, including what is usually attributed to fate.

King Janaka is reflecting on the apparent inviolability of an established moral boundary, then qualifying it by noting rare cases where an extraordinary, unrestrainable person can be seen to cross beyond that limit.