Adhyaya 35 — Madālasa’s Instruction on Purity, Impurity, and Corrective Rites (Śauca and Aśauca)
रथ्यागतमविज्ञातं दासवर्गादिनाहृतम् ।
वाक्रप्रशास्तं चिरातीतमनैकान्तरितं लघु ॥
rathyāgatam avijñātaṃ dāsa-vargādināhṛtam /
vākra-praśāstaṃ cirātītam anekāntaritaṃ laghu //
Lo que viene de la calle, lo de origen desconocido, lo traído por sirvientes y personas semejantes; lo avalado por un testimonio digno de fe, lo que ha pasado largo tiempo, y lo que ha quedado separado por muchos intervalos intermedios: todo ello se considera de categoría “leve” en la evaluación de pureza e impureza.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "dharma", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Ethics of daily life requires judgment about provenance and risk: unknown or street-sourced items are treated cautiously, but time, separation, and reliable testimony can mitigate concern.
Ancillary dharma-śāstra-like guidance embedded in the Purāṇa; not pancalakṣaṇa narrative.
‘Intervals’ (antara) and ‘time passed’ (cirātīta) imply that contact-based impurity decays—symbolically, impressions weaken when not continually reinforced.