Ālasyadoṣa-nirdeśa (On the Fault of Negligence) — The Camel’s Long-Neck Exemplum
स दृष्टवा मांसजीवी तु सुभृशं क्षुच्छुमान्वित: । अभक्षयत् ततो ग्रीवामुष्टस्य भरतर्षभ
sa dṛṣṭvā māṁsajīvī tu subhṛśaṁ kṣucchumānvitāḥ | abhakṣayat tato grīvām uṣṭasya bharatarṣabha ||
Voyant le chameau, le chacal carnassier—tourmenté par une faim extrême—se mit à mordre et à ronger, puis à dévorer le cou du chameau.
उड्ड उवाच
The verse illustrates how overpowering hunger and ingrained predatory disposition can eclipse restraint, leading to harmful action; ethically, it cautions that unchecked impulses (kṣudh/kāma) can push one away from dharma and compassion.
A flesh-eating jackal, suffering acute hunger, sees a camel and begins to feed by biting and devouring the camel’s neck, depicting opportunistic violence driven by need and habit.