Praise of Vṛṣotsarga (Bull-release), Worthy Dāna, and the Procedure for Kṣayāha & Ūrdhva-daihika Rites
श्रीकृष्ण उवाच / एका गौः स्वस्थचित्तस्य ह्यातुरस्य च गोशतम् / सहस्रं म्रियमाणस्य दत्तं वित्तविवर्जितम्
śrīkṛṣṇa uvāca / ekā gauḥ svasthacittasya hyāturasya ca gośatam / sahasraṃ mriyamāṇasya dattaṃ vittavivarjitam
قال شري كريشنا: بقرةٌ واحدةٌ تُعطى صدقةً ممن قلبه ساكن (وصحته سليمة) تعدل مئة بقرةٍ يعطيها المريض؛ وتعدل ألفًا إذا أعطاها المحتضر، ولو كان خاليًا من المال.
Śrī Kṛṣṇa (as the instructing divine speaker in the text’s dialogue frame)
Concept: Karmaphala of dāna depends on the giver’s state: calm/healthy giving has superior ethical weight; sickness and dying amplify the ‘cost’ and surrender, yet the verse ranks calm-minded giving as intrinsically higher.
Vedantic Theme: Bhāva (inner disposition) and saṅkalpa shape karma; sattvic clarity (prasanna-citta) elevates action; death-proximity intensifies renunciation but may be mixed with fear.
Application: Give when you are well and not pressured; cultivate sattva (clarity) so charity is joyful; keep a portion of resources earmarked for dāna to avoid last-minute compulsion.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.14.3–4 (further multiplication via rite, tīrtha, pātra; and daily increase of merit)
This verse teaches that the spiritual weight of go-dāna increases greatly when performed in hardship—especially during illness or at the time of death—highlighting it as a powerful dharmic act linked to merit (puṇya).
Within Preta-kāṇḍa themes, the verse underscores that timely charity near death strengthens one’s accumulated merit, which the tradition presents as supportive for the departed being (preta) in the post-death passage and judgment of karma.
Practice charity consistently while healthy, and if facing illness or end-of-life, prioritize sincere giving within one’s means—supporting care, food, shelter, or traditional dāna—so intention and sacrifice align with dharma.