The Sarasvata Hymn to Vishnu (Vishnu-Pañjara) and the Redemption of a Rakshasa
न चखाद स सत्त्वानि क्षुधा संबाधितो ऽपि सन् षष्ठे षष्ठे तदा काले जन्तुमेकमभक्षयत्
na cakhāda sa sattvāni kṣudhā saṃbādhito 'pi san ṣaṣṭhe ṣaṣṭhe tadā kāle jantumekamabhakṣayat
Though tormented by hunger, he did not devour living beings; only at each sixth interval of time did he eat a single creature.
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The phrase literally means ‘at each sixth time/period.’ Commentarially it is taken as a fixed interval (often ‘every sixth day’), highlighting an extreme reduction of violence and consumption rather than a precise calendrical rule.
Purāṇas frequently depict transformation as incremental. For a rākṣasa habituated to predation, the first step is regulated harm, moving toward fuller purification through vows and tīrtha-contact.
That prāyaścitta begins with saṃyama—mastery over appetite and impulse. Even before ritual expiation, ethical self-control is presented as the foundation of cleansing pāpa.