Adhyaya 49 — Primordial Human Creation, the Rise of Desire, and the Origins of Settlements, Measures, and Agriculture
शकटारूढभाण्डैश्च गोपालैर्विपणं विना ।
गोस्मूहैस्तथा घोषो यत्रेच्छाभूमिकेतनः ॥
śakaṭārūḍhabhāṇḍaiś ca gopālair vipaṇaṃ vinā / gosamūhais tathā ghoṣo yatreच्छābhūmiketanaḥ
Donde habitan los vaqueros, con bienes cargados en carros, y manadas de reses—pero no hay mercado—tal lugar es un “ghoṣa”, un campamento pastoril, morada en cualquier tierra disponible a voluntad.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Economic form shapes settlement form: pastoral mobility (icchā-bhūmi-ketana) contrasts with agrarian rootedness (kṣetra), showing diverse legitimate livelihoods within dharma.
Ancillary descriptive passage supporting the lived world (loka) in which sarga/pratisarga unfold; not a direct pancalakṣaṇa unit.
The cowherd camp symbolizes a life oriented to ‘go’ (vitality, nourishment) and movement—an inner mode of adaptability rather than fixed accumulation.