Kāṣṭhīla-Upākhyāna: Rākṣasī, Spear-Śakti, and Kāśī as Śakti-kṣetra
मदर्थे निहतो भर्ता त्वया निःशंकया यतः । ततोऽहं नोत्तरं वच्मि परं किंचित्सुलोचने ॥ २४ ॥
madarthe nihato bhartā tvayā niḥśaṃkayā yataḥ | tato'haṃ nottaraṃ vacmi paraṃ kiṃcitsulocane || 24 ||
بما أن زوجك قد قُتل من أجلي على يدك دون تردد، أيتها ذات العيون الجميلة، فلن أقول شيئاً آخر رداً على ذلك.
Unspecified (narrative dialogue speaker not provided in the excerpt)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
The verse highlights the grave karmic weight of actions done “for someone’s sake” and underscores moral accountability: once an irreversible act (killing) has occurred, the speaker refuses further discussion, implying the seriousness of adharmic consequences.
Indirectly, it cautions that devotion or loyalty must be guided by dharma; acting “without hesitation” for a person is not the same as righteous surrender to Bhagavān. In bhakti-oriented reading, true devotion aligns will with dharma rather than impulsive allegiance.
No explicit Vedāṅga topic (like Vyākaraṇa, Jyotiṣa, or Kalpa ritual procedure) is taught here; the practical takeaway is ethical discernment (dharma-viveka) in decision-making rather than a technical rule.