ब्रह्मस्वहरण-निषेधः — Prohibition of Appropriating Brahmin Property
Brahmasva
सोम॑ तु रजसा ध्वस्तं विक्रीणन् विधिपूर्वकम् | श्रोत्रियो वार्धुषी भूत्वा न चिरं स विनश्यति
somaṃ tu rajasā dhvastaṃ vikrīṇan vidhipūrvakam | śrotriyo vārddhuṣī bhūtvā na ciraṃ sa vinaśyati ||
Dijo el Caṇḍāla: «Incluso un brahmán versado en los Vedas, si vende Soma mancillado por el polvo—polvo de las pezuñas de las vacas—y por la leche, aunque lo haga conforme al rito; o si se entrega a la usura y vive prestando con interés, no perdura mucho: pronto cae en ruina».
चाण्डाल उवाच
Ritual correctness alone cannot justify an unethical livelihood: selling impure sacrificial Soma or adopting usury is portrayed as adharma that leads to swift downfall, even for a Veda-learned Brahmin.
A Caṇḍāla speaker delivers a moral warning about conduct and livelihood, criticizing certain practices (trade in defiled Soma and moneylending at interest) as spiritually and socially destructive, regardless of one’s learning or status.