Adhyaya 11 — The Son’s Discourse on Embryogenesis, Birth, and the Wheel of Saṃsāra
कामेर्ष्याक्रोधसम्बन्धं यौवने चातिदुःसहम् ।
दुःखप्राया वृद्धता च मरणे दुःखमुत्तमम् ॥
kāmerṣyā-krodha-sambandhaṁ yauvane cāti-duḥsaham | duḥkha-prāyā vṛddhatā ca maraṇe duḥkham uttamam ||
যৌৱনত কাম, ঈৰ্ষ্যা আৰু ক্ৰোধৰ সঙ্গ অতি অসহ্য; বাৰ্ধক্যও বেছিভাগ দুখময়—আৰু মৃত্যুকালে দুখ সৰ্বাধিক।
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Youth is not automatically ‘happy’; it is often dominated by turbulent passions. Mastery of desire, envy, and anger is presented as essential dharma and as preparation for liberation.
Didactic instruction related to dharma (self-control) and the limits of worldly life; not a direct pancalakṣaṇa narrative unit.
The ‘three fires’ (kāma–īrṣyā–krodha) are inner narakas; conquering them is a microcosmic liberation that anticipates freedom from the larger saṃsāra-cycle.