Vāmadeva’s Rājadharma: Norm-Setting, Counsel, and the Prevention of Rāṣṭra-Vināśa (वामदेव-प्रोक्तं राजधर्मम्)
निगृहीतादमात्याच्च स्त्रीभ्यश्नैव विशेषतः । पर्वताद् विषमाद् दुर्गाद्धस्तिनो 5श्वात् सरीसृपात् । एतेभ्यो नित्ययुक्त: सन् रक्षेदात्मानमेव तु
nigṛhītād amātyāc ca strībhyaś caiva viśeṣataḥ | parvatād viṣamād durgād hastino 'śvāt sarīsṛpāt | etebhyo nityayuktaḥ san rakṣed ātmānam eva tu ||
瓦摩提婆说道:国王当恒常护持自身——尤须防备曾被拘捕过的臣子,亦须防备妇人;并当时刻警惕险峻之山与难以攻取之要塞,以及象、马与蛇。以不懈的戒备对待这些危险之源,便能保全其身,从而维系其统治之安定。
वामदेव उवाच
The verse teaches rājadharma as disciplined vigilance: a ruler must proactively guard his person against predictable sources of danger—political resentment (a previously arrested minister), personal vulnerabilities (especially involving women), hazardous terrain (treacherous mountains and difficult forts), and physical threats (elephants, horses, serpents). Self-protection is framed as a prerequisite for stable governance.
In the Śānti Parva’s instruction on kingship and governance, the sage Vāmadeva delivers practical counsel to a king. Here he lists specific categories of threats—human, situational, and animal—and urges continuous alertness so that the king preserves his life and, by extension, the order of the realm.