Swaveda

Arthashastra · Chapter 13

Book 1 (Concerning Discipline), Chapter XIII: PROTECTION OF PARTIES FOR OR

Translated by R. Shamasastry (1915, public domain), 1915. Public domain.

  1. 1

    Original script forthcoming

    AGAINST ONE'S OWN CAUSE IN ONE'S OWN STATE.

  2. 2

    Original script forthcoming

    HAVING set up spies over his prime ministers (mahdmatra), the king shall proceed to espy both citizens and country people.

  3. 3

    Original script forthcoming

    Classmate spies (satri) formed as opposing factions shall carry on disputations in places of pilgrimage (tirtha), in assemblies, houses, corporations (púga), and amid congregations of people. One spy may say:--

  4. 4

    Original script forthcoming

    "This king is said to be endowed with all desirable qualities; he seems to be a stranger to such tendencies as would lead him to oppress citizens and country people by levying heavy fines and taxes."

  5. 5

    Original script forthcoming

    Against those who seem to commend this opinion, another spy may interrupt the speaker and say:--

  6. 6

    Original script forthcoming

    "People suffering from anarchy as illustrated by the proverbial tendency of a large fish swallowing a small one (mátsyanyáyábhibhútah prajah), first elected Manu, the Vaivasvata, to be their king; and allotted one-sixth of the grains grown and one-tenth of merchandise as sovereign dues. Fed by this payment, kings took upon themselves the responsibility of maintaining the safety and security of their subjects

  7. 7

    Original script forthcoming

    (yogakshemavahdah), and of being answerable for the sins of their subjects when the principle of levying just punishments and taxes has been violated. Hence hermits, too, provide the king with one-sixth of the grains gleaned by them, thinking that ‘it is a tax payable to him who protects us.’ It is the king in whom the duties of both Indra (the rewarder) and Yama (the punisher) are blended, and he is a visible dispenser of punishments and rewards (heda- prasdda),; whoever disregards kings will be visited with divine punishments, too. Hence kings shall never be despised."

  8. 8

    Original script forthcoming

    Thus treacherous opponents of sovereignty shall be silenced.

  9. 9

    Original script forthcoming

    Spies shall also know the rumours prevalent in the state. Spies with shaved heads or braided hair shall ascertain whether there prevails content or discontent among those who live upon the grains, cattle, and gold of the king, among those who supply the same (to the king) in weal or woe, those who keep under restraint a disaffected relative of the king or a rebellious district, as well as those who drive away an invading enemy or a wild tribe. The greater the contentment of such persons, the more shall be the honour shown to them; while those who are disaffected shall be ingratiated by rewards or conciliation; or dissension may be sown among them so that they may alienate themselves from each other, from a neighbouring enemy, from a wild tribe, or from a banished or imprisoned prince. Failing this measure, they may be so employed in collecting fines and taxes as to incur the displeasure of the people. Those who are inebriated with feelings of enmity may be put down by punishment in secret or by making them incur the displeasure of the whole country. Or having taken the sons and wives of such treacherous persons under State protection, they may be made to live in mines, lest they may afford shelter to enemies.

  10. 10

    Original script forthcoming

    Those that are angry, those that are greedy, those that are alarmed, as well as those that despise the king are the instruments

  11. 11

    Original script forthcoming

    of enemies. Spies under the guise of astrologers and tellers of omens and augury shall ascertain the relationship of such persons with each other and with foreign kings.

  12. 12

    Original script forthcoming

    Honours and rewards shall be conferred upon those that are contented, while those that are disaffected shall be brought round by conciliation, by gifts, or by sowing dissension, or by punishment.

  13. 13

    Original script forthcoming

    Thus in his own state a wise king shall guard factions among his people, friendly or hostile, powerful or powerless against the intrigue of foreign kings.

Commentary

Book 1 of Kauṭilya's Arthaśāstra, Chapter XIII. 13 paragraphs from Shamasastry's 1915 English translation. The Arthaśāstra is a treatise on statecraft, economic policy, and military strategy attributed to Kauṭilya (Cāṇakya), advisor to Chandragupta Maurya. Shamasastry's translation, the first into English, was published from his discovery of a 4th-century manuscript at the Government Oriental Library in Mysore. Modern critical editions (Olivelle 2013, Kangle 1965) are more philologically rigorous; we cite them but do not reproduce.