ततः सा कोपसन्तप्ता भूपालं प्रत्यभाषत । नायं धर्मः स्मृतः क्षात्त्रो यस्त्वयाद्य निषेवितः
tataḥ sā kopasantaptā bhūpālaṃ pratyabhāṣata | nāyaṃ dharmaḥ smṛtaḥ kṣāttro yastvayādya niṣevitaḥ
তেতিয়া তাই ক্ৰোধে দগ্ধ হৈ ভূপালক ক’লে: “এইটো স্মৃতিত কোৱা ক্ষাত্ৰধৰ্ম নহয়; আজি তুমি যি আচৰণ কৰিলে সেয়া অধৰ্ম।”
Mṛgī (the doe) speaking to King Suprabha (within Paulastya’s narration)
Tirtha: Arbuda-kṣetra (contextual)
Type: kshetra
Scene: A wounded doe, eyes blazing with grief and anger, confronts a crowned king with bow in hand on a rocky mountainside; attendants stand stunned; the atmosphere is tense, moral accusation hanging in the air.
Royal power must be governed by dharma; violence undertaken as mere passion is condemned as contrary to true kṣatriya duty.
The teaching appears within the Kapilā Tīrtha māhātmya narrative of Arbuda Khaṇḍa, preparing the ground for tīrtha-based purification and reform.
None explicitly; it is a dharmic rebuke defining improper conduct.