Adhyaya 28 — Alarka Inquires into Varna and Ashrama Dharma; Madalasa Defines the Fourfold Duties
भृत्यात्मजान् जामयोऽथ दीनान्धपतितानपि ।
यथाशक्त्यान्नदानेन वयांसि पशवस्तथा ॥
bhṛtyātmajān jāmayo 'tha dīnāndhapatitān api /
yathāśaktyānnadānena vayāṃsi paśavas tathā //
وعلى قدر طاقته ينبغي له أن يهب صدقة الطعام للخدم والأطفال، وللقريبات من جهة المصاهرة، وكذلك للفقراء والعميان والساقطين؛ ومثل ذلك يُطعم الطيور والبهائم.
{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "dharma", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Gṛhastha-dharma is social and ecological: care extends beyond one’s immediate family to the vulnerable and even non-human life, regulated by ‘yathāśakti’ (realistic capacity).
Ācāra-dharma instruction; not directly sarga/pratisarga/manvantara/vaṃśa/vaṃśānucarita.
Food (anna) is treated as sacred circulation. Feeding others represents surrender of possessiveness and recognition of shared prāṇa across beings.