Ulūka’s Provocative Envoy-Speech in the Pāṇḍava Camp
Ulūka-dūta-vākya
केचिदीश्वरनिर्दिष्टा: केचिदेव यदृच्छया । पूर्वकर्मभिरप्यन्ये त्रैधमेतत् प्रदृश्यते । तस्मादनर्थमापतन्न: स्थिरो भूत्वा निशामय
ke cid īśvara-nirdiṣṭāḥ ke cid eva yadṛcchayā | pūrva-karmabhir apy anye traidham etat pradṛśyate | tasmād anartham āpatannaḥ sthiro bhūtvā niśāmaya ||
三阇耶说道:“有人依主宰之指引而行;有人因偶然而动;又有许多人受往昔业力所驱。人之行事,遂见此三重之相。故今我等陷于此大厄,当自持镇定——以安定之心听我尽述其始末。”
संजय उवाच
The verse presents a threefold explanation for why people act: divine prompting (īśvara-nirdiṣṭa), accidental circumstance (yadṛcchā), and the momentum of past deeds (pūrva-karma). Ethically, it urges steadiness of mind in crisis and careful listening before judgment—recognizing that agency can be complex and not reducible to a single cause.
Sañjaya, as the narrator-messenger, prepares his listener to hear a difficult report. Before recounting events, he frames the unfolding calamity as arising through different causal modes (divine, chance, karmic), and he counsels composure—‘be steady and listen’—so the account can be received with clarity rather than agitation.