तेषा मदत्त्वा चाश्रंति चिकित्संति न रोगिणः । अजाविको माहिषिकः समुद्री वृषलीपतिः
teṣā madattvā cāśraṃti cikitsaṃti na rogiṇaḥ | ajāviko māhiṣikaḥ samudrī vṛṣalīpatiḥ
Beben hasta embriagarse y luego se lamentan; no atienden al enfermo. En este pasaje se señalan como signos de conducta caída: el cuidador de cabras y ovejas, el boyero de búfalos, el navegante del mar y el marido de una mujer śūdra; así se enumeran aquí.
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta), deduced from Māheśvara-khaṇḍa narrative convention
Scene: A grim village/market tableau: men drinking to stupor and wailing; a sick person unattended; figures representing marginal or exploitative livelihoods shown as symbols of social inversion; a distant temple silhouette suggesting the lost axis of dharma.
Intoxication and negligence toward the suffering are censured; dharma values sobriety, responsibility, and care for the ill.
No sacred geography appears in this verse.
None; the verse criticizes behaviors and depicts social markers within the text’s ethical listing.