Dietary Rules & Purification — Dietary Rules, Purification (Śauca), and the Duties of the Householder and Forest-Dweller
मणिरत्नप्रवालानां तद्वन्मुक्ताफलस्य च शैलदारुमयानां च तृणमूलौषधान्यपि
maṇiratnapravālānāṃ tadvanmuktāphalasya ca śailadārumayānāṃ ca tṛṇamūlauṣadhānyapi
The discussion includes gems, jewels, and corals—likewise pearls; also objects made of stone and wood; and further, grass, roots, and medicinal herbs.
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Purity is treated as a practical discipline extending beyond food to objects and substances, encouraging mindful handling of both valuables and simple natural items.
It functions as ancillary dharma instruction (ācāra), not as one of the five defining Purāṇic topics.
By placing pearls and gems alongside grass and herbs, the text levels the material hierarchy under a single dharmic lens: all objects can be subject to purity rules.