Adhyaya 29 — Alarka’s Inquiry and Madalasa’s Teaching on Householder Dharma (Gārhasthya), Vaiśvadeva, and Atithi Hospitality
वैश्वदेवं हि नामैतत् सायं प्रातरुदाहृतम् ।
आचम्य च ततः कुर्यात् प्राज्ञो द्वारावलोकनम् ॥
vaiśvadevaṃ hi nāmaitat sāyaṃ prātar udāhṛtam / ācamya ca tataḥ kuryāt prājño dvārāvalokanam
Esto se llama en verdad el rito Vaiśvadeva, prescrito para realizarse al atardecer y al amanecer. Tras hacer ācāmana (sorber agua purificadora), el sabio debe mirar hacia la puerta, para ver si ha llegado algún huésped.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "dharma", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Worship and hospitality are linked: after offering to the divine, one immediately turns to the human/divine guest at the threshold—making the home a site of both devotion and service.
Ācāra/Dharma passage; it supports the Purāṇic social-religious program rather than cosmological enumeration.
The doorway is the meeting point of worlds; ‘dvārāvalokana’ symbolizes readiness to receive dharma in embodied form (the guest), not merely as an abstract rite.