Aṣṭāvakra’s Visit to Kubera: Hospitality, Temptation, and the Ethics of Restraint (अष्टावक्र-वैश्रवणोपाख्यानम्)
स्वाहा वौषट ब्राह्मणा: सौरभेयी धर्म चाग्रयं कालचक्रं बल॑ च | यशो दमो बुद्धिमतां स्थितिश्न शुभाशुभं ये मुनयश्न सप्त
vāyudeva uvāca | svāhā vauṣaṭ brāhmaṇāḥ saurabheyī dharmaś cāgryaṃ kālacakraṃ balaṃ ca | yaśo damo buddhimatāṃ sthitiś ca śubhāśubhaṃ ye munayaś ca sapta ||
Dijo Vāyu: «En el orden del sacrificio están las fórmulas “svāhā” y “vauṣaṭ”; los brāhmaṇas; la vaca (Saurabheyī); el Dharma supremo; la rueda del Tiempo; y la fuerza. Asimismo, la fama, el dominio de sí, la firmeza de los sabios y toda la gama de frutos kármicos auspiciosos e infaustos, así como los Siete Ṛṣis. Sabe que todo ello—junto con los muchos principios divinos y cósmicos enumerados antes—ha surgido de Mahādeva (Śiva).»
वायुदेव उवाच
The verse links ritual speech (svāhā, vauṣaṭ), social-religious authority (Brāhmaṇas), and ethical qualities (dharma, self-restraint, wise steadiness) with cosmic principles (Time’s wheel, karmic auspicious/inauspicious results), presenting them as parts of a single sacred order ultimately grounded in Mahādeva.
Vāyudeva continues a long enumeration of divine, ritual, and moral categories, concluding that these principles and beings should be understood as originating from Mahādeva, reinforcing a Śaiva-centered cosmology within the Anuśāsana Parva’s didactic discourse.