The Song of the Avantī Brāhmaṇa (Avanti-brāhmaṇa-gītā): Mind as the Root of Suffering and Equanimity Amid Insult
तस्यैवं यक्षवित्तस्य च्युतस्योभयलोकत: । धर्मकामविहीनस्य चुक्रुधु: पञ्चभागिन: ॥ ९ ॥
tasyaivaṁ yakṣa-vittasya cyutasyobhaya-lokataḥ dharma-kāma-vihīnasya cukrudhuḥ pañca-bhāginaḥ
Ainsi, les divinités présidant aux cinq sacrifices domestiques s’irritèrent contre ce brāhmaṇa avare, qui gardait sa richesse tel un Yakṣa, sans bonne destinée ni en ce monde ni dans l’autre, et dépourvu de dharma comme de jouissance légitime.
This verse teaches that wealth gained and held with strain can cause one to fall from benefit in both this world and the next when it destroys dharma and proper, righteous enjoyment.
They refer to the five parties considered entitled to a person’s wealth—commonly understood in dharma-discourse as dependents/relations and rightful claimants (such as family and others with legitimate share). The point is that even those around him turned hostile due to his miserliness and loss of dharma.
Earn honestly, share responsibly, and keep wealth subordinate to dharma and devotion; otherwise anxiety, conflict, and spiritual loss arise even amid material accumulation.