Adhyaya 8 — Harishchandra’s Trial: Truth, the Sale of Family, and Bondage to a Chandala
अर्धदग्धाः शवाः श्यामाः विकसद्दन्तपङ्क्तयः । हसन्तीवाग्निमध्यस्थाः कायस्येयं दशा त्विति ॥
ardha-dagdhāḥ śavāḥ śyāmā vikasad-danta-paṅktayaḥ / hasantīva agni-madhya-sthāḥ kāyasya iyaṃ daśā tv iti
Cadáveres medio quemados, ennegrecidos, con hileras de dientes expuestos, se alzaban entre el fuego como si rieran, (mostrando) que tal es, en verdad, la condición del cuerpo.
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The ‘as if laughing’ corpses invert ordinary pride: the body mocks human vanity. The ethical pressure is toward humility, right conduct, and investment in that which is not burned—dharma, merit, and liberating knowledge.
Ākhyāna/Upākhyāna: a didactic reflection embedded in narrative description, not a pancalakṣaṇa core (creation/manvantara/genealogy) passage.
The ‘laughter’ signifies the revelation of truth that shatters delusion: the ego’s seriousness is exposed as misplaced. Fire symbolizes transformative insight; in its midst, the reality of the kāya is unmistakable.