एकजन्मसुखस्यार्थे सहस्राणि विलापयेत् । प्राज्ञो जन्मसहस्रेषु संचिनोत्येकजन्मनि
ekajanmasukhasyārthe sahasrāṇi vilāpayet | prājño janmasahasreṣu saṃcinotyekajanmani
Por el goce de una sola vida, uno puede malgastar los frutos de miles. Mas el sabio, en una sola vida, acumula mérito que sostiene miles de nacimientos.
Sārasvata (contextual continuation)
Scene: A sage points to a balance scale: on one side fleeting pleasures (garlands, coins, wine-cup), on the other side enduring puṇya (tīrtha-water pot, lamp, scripture, offerings). Behind, a faint wheel of births illustrates thousands of lives.
Short-term pleasure can destroy long-term welfare; wise practice (notably dāna and dharma) builds merit that benefits many future births.
No holy site is specified; the teaching is about karma, rebirth, and the economy of puṇya.
No explicit ritual; it advocates dharmic accumulation of merit—commonly achieved through dāna, vrata, and devotion.