परलोकस्त्वयं लोको जीयते भार्यया द्वयम् । देवपित्रतिथीनां च तृप्तिः स्याद्भार्यया गृहे । गृहस्थः स तु विज्ञेयो गृहे यस्य पतिव्रता
paralokastvayaṃ loko jīyate bhāryayā dvayam | devapitratithīnāṃ ca tṛptiḥ syādbhāryayā gṛhe | gṛhasthaḥ sa tu vijñeyo gṛhe yasya pativratā
Through the wife, both this world and the next are sustained. In the home, the satisfaction of the devas, the ancestors, and the guests is brought about through her. Indeed, only he is to be known as a true householder whose home contains a pativratā wife.
Unknown (contextual narrator within Dharmāraṇya Khaṇḍa; likely a Purāṇic teacher-voice)
Scene: A home altar with offerings; wife serving food and water to a guest, while pitṛ-tarpaṇa vessels and deva-lamp signify satisfaction of gods and ancestors through household order.
Gṛhastha-dharma is upheld through the wife’s presence and virtue—enabling offerings, hospitality, and continuity that benefit both worlds.
No named tīrtha; the verse glorifies the home itself as a dharma-field when ordered by pativratā-dharma.
It implies household duties that satisfy devas, pitṛs, and guests (offerings and hospitality), though no single procedure is detailed.