Nahūṣa’s Fall Explained: Agastya’s Account to Indra (Śalya-narrated)
वाहान् कृत्वा वाहयसि तेन स्वर्गद्धितप्रभ: । ध्वंस पाप परिश्रष्ट: क्षीणपुण्यो महीतले
vāhān kṛtvā vāhayasi tena svargārddhitaprabhaḥ | dhvaṃsa pāpa pariśraṣṭaḥ kṣīṇapuṇyo mahītale ||
Agastya said: “By making others into beasts of burden you drive them; by that deed your splendor is ‘raised’ only toward heaven in appearance. Yet, when the result ripens, you fall—your sin clinging to you—and, your merit exhausted, you are cast down upon the earth.”
अगस्त्य उवाच
Exploitation—treating others as mere instruments or beasts of burden—creates pāpa that eventually overpowers temporary prosperity. Even if one seems to rise (as if toward svarga), when puṇya is spent the person falls, bearing the moral consequence of the harm done.
Agastya delivers a moral warning: the act of forcing others to carry burdens and driving them is condemned. He frames the outcome in karmic terms—apparent elevation followed by downfall—highlighting that unethical gain cannot secure lasting honor or heavenly reward.