विचार्येति स दुष्टात्मा भृत्यानाज्ञापयत्क्रुधा । आदावेनं घातयंतु ततः कार्पटिकानिमान्
vicāryeti sa duṣṭātmā bhṛtyānājñāpayatkrudhā | ādāvenaṃ ghātayaṃtu tataḥ kārpaṭikānimān
Having decided so, that wicked-souled man angrily commanded his servants: ‘First kill this one; then kill these mendicants as well.’
Skanda (narrating); quoted speech by Tārākṣa (deduced)
Listener: Ṛṣis (frame typical)
Scene: A commanding figure on a threshold, arm outstretched; servants with sticks/swords surge forward; a lone defender stands firm; nearby, mendicants with patched garments recoil or pray.
Anger and greed together generate escalating violence, even against harmless wanderers—an archetypal pattern of adharma.
Kāśī is the overarching sacred geography of the Kāśīkhaṇḍa; this verse is a narrative turning point within that setting.
None; the verse condemns behavior implicitly by depicting wrongful commands.