श्रूयते द्विजवाक्यैस्तु न दोषो विद्यते क्वचित् । कुशाः शाकं पयो मत्स्या गन्धाः पुष्पाक्षता दधि । मांसं शय्यासनं धानाः प्रत्याख्येया न वारि च
śrūyate dvijavākyaistu na doṣo vidyate kvacit | kuśāḥ śākaṃ payo matsyā gandhāḥ puṣpākṣatā dadhi | māṃsaṃ śayyāsanaṃ dhānāḥ pratyākhyeyā na vāri ca
Aus den Worten der Zweimalgeborenen vernimmt man, dass hierin nirgends ein Fehl liegt. Kuśa-Gras, Gemüse, Milch, Fisch, Düfte, Blumen, ungebrochener Reis, Quark—auch Fleisch, Lager und Sitz, Körner—sind nicht zurückzuweisen; nicht einmal Wasser darf man verwerfen.
Narratorial voice citing dvija-tradition (speaker not explicitly tagged in the verse excerpt)
Tirtha: Revā (Narmadā) tīrtha-context
Type: kshetra
Listener: null
Scene: A ritual setting near a riverbank: a priest instructs that common offerings—kuśa, vegetables, milk, fish, perfumes, flowers, akṣata, curd, even meat and simple bedding/seating—should not be rejected; vessels of water and pūjā trays are visible.
Offerings made in a dharmic context should not be contemptuously refused; receptivity and respect for faith uphold social and ritual order.
The verse sits within the Revā Khaṇḍa’s Narmadā milieu, but it teaches general ritual and hospitality norms rather than praising a single site.
A rule of conduct: do not reject items offered for ritual/charity—ranging from kuśa, flowers, akṣata, dairy, grains, to even water.
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