दानफलप्रकरणम् — उपानहदानं, तिलदानं, भूमिदानं, गोदानं, अन्नदानं च
Gifts and Their Stated Results: Footwear, Sesame, Land, Cows, and Food
(एकागारकरीं दत्त्वा षष्टिसाहस्रमूर्थध्वग: । तावत्या हरणे पृथ्व्या नरकं द्विगुणोत्तरम् ।।
bhīṣma uvāca | ekāgārakarīṁ dattvā ṣaṣṭisāhasram ūrdhvagaḥ | tāvatyā haraṇe pṛthvyā narakaṁ dviguṇottaram || yasya viprās tu śaṁsanti sādhór bhūmiṁ sadaiva hi | na tasya śatravo rājan praśaṁsanti vasuṁdharām ||
Bhīṣma dijo: «Quien dona tierra suficiente para levantar una sola casa asciende a los mundos superiores y mora allí durante sesenta mil años. Pero quien arrebata una medida igual de tierra debe morar en el infierno por un tiempo doble. Oh Rey, la donación de tierra de aquel hombre virtuoso, que los brahmanes alaban sin cesar, no es alabada por sus enemigos; así, la aprobación de los justos es la verdadera medida de ese mérito».
भीष्म उवाच
Donating land—especially a house-site—is presented as a high merit leading to long residence in higher worlds, while unlawfully taking the same amount brings a doubled period of suffering in hell. The verse stresses proportional karmic consequence and the sanctity of property and gifts.
Bhishma, instructing the king on dharma, contrasts the fruit of bhūmidāna (land-gift) with the punishment for land-seizure. He adds that the lasting validation of such a gift comes from the praise of Brahmins and the righteous, not from political opponents.