Adhyaya 34 — Madālāsā’s Instruction on Sadācāra (Householder Conduct, Purity, and Daily Rites)
सुहृद्दीक्षितभूपालस्नातकश्वशुरैः सह ।
ऋत्विगादीन् षडर्घार्हानर्चयेच्च गृहागतान् ॥
suhṛddīkṣitabhūpālasnātakaśvaśuraiḥ saha |
ṛtvigādīn ṣaḍarghārhān arcayec ca gṛhāgatān ||
Junto con amigos, personas consagradas, reyes, snātakas y suegros, debe uno honrar a quienes son dignos de la hospitalidad séxtuple (ṣaḍ-argha)—como los sacerdotes oficiantes y otros—cuando llegan a la casa.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "bhakti", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Hospitality is a dharmic duty that sustains social and ritual order: learned/ritual persons and dignitaries are to be received with formal respect, reinforcing reciprocity between householders and the sacred economy of rites.
Ācāra section (dharma practice), not pancalakṣaṇa.
Receiving the worthy guest mirrors receiving the ‘divine presence’ in one’s home and mind; ṣaḍargha symbolizes completeness of offering—integrating speech, body, resources, and reverence into one act.