दीपकाष्ठोपलादीनि चरमं बहुवार्षिकम् । इति कानीयसान्याहुर्दाननाशत्रयं श्रृणु
dīpakāṣṭhopalādīni caramaṃ bahuvārṣikam | iti kānīyasānyāhurdānanāśatrayaṃ śrṛṇu
Las ofrendas de lámparas, la leña, las piedras y cosas semejantes son las más bajas, y su mérito es efímero aun a través de muchos años. Por eso se las llama ‘menores’. Ahora escucha las tres maneras por las que un don se arruina y queda sin fruto.
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa) addressing the sages (deduced from Māheśvarakhaṇḍa narrative convention)
Scene: A teacher-sage instructs a king in a quiet hermitage; in the foreground are humble offerings—oil-lamp, firewood, stones—contrasted with more nourishing gifts; the mood is contemplative and corrective.
Small gifts still matter, but the purity of intention and conduct is crucial—otherwise charity can lose its spiritual fruit.
No tīrtha is named; the verse transitions to a general dharma rule on ‘dāna-nāśa’.
It lists lesser gifts (lamp, firewood, stones) and introduces the teaching of three ways charity’s merit can be destroyed.