Rudra-Śiva: Names, Two Natures, and the Logic of Epithets (रुद्रनाम-बहुरूपत्व-प्रकरणम्)
(तथैव देवि वैश्याश्व॒ लोकयात्राहिता: स्मृता: । अन्ये तानुपजीवन्ति प्रत्यक्षफलदा हि ते ।।
tathaiva devi vaiśyāś ca lokayātrāhitāḥ smṛtāḥ | anye tān upajīvanti pratyakṣaphaladā hi te || yadi na syus tathā vaiśyā na bhaveyus tathā pare || vaiśyasya satataṁ dharmaḥ pāśupālyaṁ kṛṣis tathā | agnihotraparisphando dānādhyayanam eva ca | atithisatkāraḥ śamo damo brāhmaṇānāṁ svāgataṁ tyāgaś ca ||
Maheshvara said: “O Goddess, in the same way the Vaiśyas are remembered as those who sustain the onward journey of society’s life. The other social orders live by relying upon them, for they yield visible, immediate results. If there were no Vaiśyas, the other orders too would not endure. The Vaiśya’s constant dharma is the tending of cattle, agriculture (and livelihood through trade), the regular performance of Agnihotra, giving, and study; along with good conduct grounded in the right path—hospitality to guests, self-restraint and discipline, honoring and welcoming Brahmins, and generosity through renunciation.”
श्रीमहेश्वर उवाच
The passage frames the Vaiśya’s dharma as socially indispensable: by producing tangible goods and services (agriculture, cattle-rearing, trade), they sustain the livelihood of all, and their ethical ideal includes ritual responsibility (Agnihotra), learning, charity, hospitality, self-control, and honoring Brahmins.
In Anuśāsana Parva’s instruction setting, Mahēśvara addresses Devī and explains the role and duties of the Vaiśya order, emphasizing that the other orders depend on them for practical sustenance and that their prescribed conduct combines economic work with religious and moral disciplines.