स्वप्राणान्यः परप्राणैः प्रपुष्णात्यघृणः पुमान् । तद्वधस्तस्य हि श्रेयो यद्दोषाद्यात्यधः पुमान्
svaprāṇānyaḥ paraprāṇaiḥ prapuṣṇātyaghṛṇaḥ pumān | tadvadhastasya hi śreyo yaddoṣādyātyadhaḥ pumān
That merciless man who sustains his own life by taking the lives of others—his killing is indeed the better course; for because of his wrongdoing he drags people down to ruin.
Vāsudeva
Listener: Guha (Skanda/Kumāra)
Scene: A guardian-king or divine commander confronts a ruthless predator who feeds on others’ lives; behind them, frightened people and a threatened sacrificial fire symbolize collapsing order; the act is shown as protective, not vengeful.
Dharma permits decisive restraint of violent cruelty; protecting others can be a higher good than tolerating destructive wrongdoing.
No tīrtha is referenced; the teaching concerns social and moral protection.
None; this verse frames a dhārmic rationale for punishment.