प्रतिश्रुतं कृतं श्लाघ्या दासतांत्यजपक्वणे । हरिश्चंद्रस्येव नृणां न श्लाघ्या सत्यसंधता
pratiśrutaṃ kṛtaṃ ślāghyā dāsatāṃtyajapakvaṇe | hariścaṃdrasyeva nṛṇāṃ na ślāghyā satyasaṃdhatā
Cumplir una promesa una vez dada es, en verdad, digno de alabanza—hasta en quien ha madurado al renunciar a la dependencia servil. Pero entre los hombres no se elogia como se debe la firmeza en la verdad, aunque sea como la de el rey Hariścandra.
Mārkaṇḍeya (contextual, inferred from subsequent verses)
Scene: A didactic moment: the speaker contrasts genuine praiseworthiness of keeping promises with society’s shallow valuation, invoking King Hariścandra as a luminous moral reference.
Dharma is upheld by satya—fulfilling one’s word is a sacred virtue exemplified by Hariścandra.
No specific tīrtha is named in this verse; it functions as a dharma-instruction within the Kaumārikākhaṇḍa narrative.
None explicitly; the verse emphasizes ethical observance—truthfulness and keeping vows.