यथा न काचित् प्रविशेद् योषिदत्र हरान्तिकम् दृष्ट्वा परांस्त्रियं चात्र वदेथा मम पुत्रक //
yathā na kācit praviśed yoṣidatra harāntikam dṛṣṭvā parāṃstriyaṃ cātra vadethā mama putraka //
Veille à ce qu’aucune femme n’entre ici pour s’approcher, en secret et en privé, d’un autre homme. Et si tu vois ici l’épouse d’autrui, parle aussitôt : «Elle est à moi, mon fils !»
Nothing directly—this verse is ethical instruction (nīti/ācāra) focused on household boundaries and social propriety, not cosmology or pralaya.
It frames a duty of vigilance and boundary-keeping: a householder (and by extension a ruler responsible for public order) should prevent improper access and situations that could lead to scandal, coercion, or breach of marital/social norms.
There is no explicit Vāstu or ritual rule, but it implies controlled access to private quarters—an idea that can align with household/inner-space management rather than temple architecture.