Śuka’s Guṇa-Transcendence and Vyāsa’s Consolation (शुकगति-वर्णनम्)
स्नाह्मालभ पिब प्राश जुहुध्यग्नीन् यजेत्यपि । ब्रवीहि शृूणु चापीति विवश: कार्यते परै:
snāhi mālabha piba prāśa juhudhy agnīn yajety api | brūhi śṛṇu cāpīti vivaśaḥ kāryate paraiḥ ||
毗湿摩说:“去沐浴;涂抹香油;饮水;进食;倾献供物;从事火祭(阿耆尼霍特罗);开口言说,也要倾听。”人们以这般反复的催促,迫使国王照做,使他陷入既定的礼制与公务,而不得随己意裁断。
भीष्य उवाच
Bhishma highlights how a ruler’s agency can be eroded by constant directives from attendants, priests, and courtiers. The ethical point is that governance requires inner autonomy and discernment; otherwise, even ‘dutiful’ actions become mere compliance under pressure.
In Bhishma’s instruction on royal conduct in the Shanti Parva, he describes the king’s daily life being filled with commands—bathe, anoint, eat, perform offerings, speak and listen—so that the king is driven by others’ expectations and ritual schedules rather than acting freely.