Śikṣā-nirūpaṇa (Exposition of Discipline): Son’s Marriage, Paternal Duty, and Royal Administration
स्तनंधयी क्वचिद्बालः स्तनहीनो न रोदिति । श्वश्रूर्वध्वा न कुत्रापि प्ररोदित्यवमानिता ॥ ३० ॥
stanaṃdhayī kvacidbālaḥ stanahīno na roditi | śvaśrūrvadhvā na kutrāpi prarodityavamānitā || 30 ||
কখনও স্তন্যপায়ী শিশু কাঁদে, কিন্তু স্তন না পেলেও কাঁদে না। তেমনি পুত্রবধূকে অপমানকারী শাশুড়ি কোথাও কাঁদে না—তার হৃদয় কঠোর হয়ে যায়।
Suta (narrating the Purana dialogue/tradition)
Vrata: none
Rasa: {"primary_rasa":"bibhatsa","secondary_rasa":"karuna","emotional_journey":"Begins with the tenderness of an infant’s cry, then turns to a stark, unsettling moral comparison about shameless hardness of heart."}
It cautions that repeated insult and hard-hearted behavior in family life erodes natural tenderness and remorse, becoming a subtle cause of adharma and inner spiritual decline.
Bhakti is sustained by humility and compassion; the verse indirectly warns that contempt and humiliation of others—especially within the home—pollutes the mind and obstructs steady devotion and remembrance.
No specific Vedanga (like Vyakarana, Jyotisha, or Kalpa) is taught here; the practical takeaway is sadachara—disciplined speech and respectful conduct—as a foundation for dharma and ritual purity.