तच्छ्रुत्वा प्राह मांसादः कर्मनामानि पार्थिव । मिथः कृतानि संज्ञार्थमस्माभिः स्वयमेव हि
tacchrutvā prāha māṃsādaḥ karmanāmāni pārthiva | mithaḥ kṛtāni saṃjñārthamasmābhiḥ svayameva hi
Als er dies hörte, sprach Māṃsāda: „O König, dies sind Namen, die aus den Taten (Karma) hervorgehen. Wir selbst haben sie einander gegeben, als Bezeichnungen, die unser Verhalten kennzeichnen.“
Māṃsāda (preta)
Listener: Sages (frame); immediate: king
Scene: Māṃsāda speaks with a resigned clarity, pointing to himself and the others as if assigning labels; the king listens; the forest becomes a classroom of dharma.
Actions become one’s true ‘name’—a moral identity that follows beyond social titles and lineage.
Not specified in this verse; it supports the larger tīrthamāhātmya narrative by explaining karmic causation.
None; the focus is explanatory (why their names reflect deeds).