आयुर्विनश्यत्ययशो विवर्धते भाग्यं क्षयं यात्यतिदुर्गतिं व्रजेत् । स्वर्गाच्च्यवंते पितरः पुरातना धर्मव्यपेतस्य नरस्य निश्चितम्
āyurvinaśyatyayaśo vivardhate bhāgyaṃ kṣayaṃ yātyatidurgatiṃ vrajet | svargāccyavaṃte pitaraḥ purātanā dharmavyapetasya narasya niścitam
بالنسبة للرجل الذي يبتعد عن الدارما (الصلاح)، فمن المؤكد أن عمره يفنى، ويزداد خزيه، وتضيع ثروته، ويذهب إلى بؤس شديد، وحتى أسلافه القدامى يسقطون من السماء.
Unknown (gnomic statement within the narrative; speaker not identifiable from snippet alone)
Scene: A moral tableau: a man stepping off the path of dharma into a thorny wasteland; above, ancestral figures (pitṛs) slipping from a luminous heaven as his fortune and fame crumble like falling garlands.
Dharma sustains both personal welfare and ancestral merit; abandoning dharma brings ruin here and hereafter.
No particular tīrtha is praised in this verse.
No explicit rite is taught; it presents a dharma-sūtra-like consequence statement.