Adhyaya 29 — Alarka’s Inquiry and Madalasa’s Teaching on Householder Dharma (Gārhasthya), Vaiśvadeva, and Atithi Hospitality
पितरो मुनयो देवा भूतानि मनुजास्तथा ।
कृमिकीडपतङ्गाश्च वयांसि पशवोऽसुराः ॥
pitaro munayo devā bhūtāni manujās tathā | kṛmikīṭapataṅgāś ca vayāṃsi paśavo 'surāḥ ||
পিতৃসকল, ঋষিসকল, দেৱসকল, ভূত-প্ৰাণী আৰু মানুহ; কৃমি, কীট আৰু উৰা জীৱ; পখী, পশু আৰু অসুৰসকলেও—সকলেই ইয়াত অন্তৰ্ভুক্ত।
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Householder duty extends beyond one’s family: it includes obligations to ancestors (śrāddha), gods (yajña), guests and humans (atithi/dāna), and kindness to all creatures.
Dharma instruction embedded in narrative; not a pancalakṣaṇa passage.
By listing beings from pitṛs to insects and asuras, the verse hints at a unified field of life sustained by giving—dharma as ecological and metaphysical interconnectedness.