Adhyaya 14 — The Messenger of Yama Explains Karmic Retribution and the Causes of Naraka Torments
पतितप्रतिग्रहादानाद्यजनान्नित्यसेवनात् ।
पाषाणमध्यकीटत्वं नरः सततमश्नुते ॥
patita-pratigrahādānād yajanān nitya-sevanāt | pāṣāṇa-madhya-kīṭatvaṃ naraḥ satatam aśnute ||
En acceptant des dons de ceux qui sont déchus (impurs), en prenant de telles offrandes, et en consommant sans cesse ce qui est impropre ou interdit, un homme atteint continuellement l’état d’être un insecte dans la pierre.
{ "primaryRasa": "bibhatsa", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The purity of exchange matters: accepting corrupt support and normalizing improper consumption hardens character. The ‘insect in stone’ image conveys being trapped in lifelessness due to moral petrification.
Dharma and karmaphala instruction; a normative passage supplementing Purāṇic teaching.
Stone signifies tamas and rigidity; the insect within indicates a constricted, hidden life-force unable to express higher dharma—consciousness imprisoned by habitual compromise.