युवयोरैक्यभावेन सुखं जीवेदिदं जगत् । त्वया प्रदत्तः शापोऽयं मा प्रत्याख्यातिलक्षणः
yuvayoraikyabhāvena sukhaṃ jīvedidaṃ jagat | tvayā pradattaḥ śāpo'yaṃ mā pratyākhyātilakṣaṇaḥ
By the harmony and oneness between you two, may this whole world live in well-being. And may this curse you have pronounced not become a mark of retraction or denial.
Dharma (personified), in dialogue context after Brahmā’s instruction
Scene: Two divine figures stand facing each other with softened expressions, their auras merging; the world (people, animals, rivers) appears calm beneath them; a curse-scroll or fiery speech-symbol is shown being pacified into a lotus-like form.
Harmony between divine powers sustains the welfare of the world, and speech—especially a curse—should not be frivolously withdrawn.
The immediate passage leads into the glorification of Stambhatīrtha (Pillar-Tīrtha) in this adhyāya.
None in this verse; it is an ethical instruction about unity and the gravity of a śāpa (curse).