Dharmānukathana
Narration of Dharma
दद्यादाढ्यस्तु नगरं हस्तमात्रमकिञ्चनः । भुवं तयोः समफलं प्राहुर्वेदविदो जनाः ॥ १६ ॥
dadyādāḍhyastu nagaraṃ hastamātramakiñcanaḥ | bhuvaṃ tayoḥ samaphalaṃ prāhurvedavido janāḥ || 16 ||
Le riche doit donner même une ville, tandis que le démuni ne doit offrir que ce qui tient dans sa main; les sages connaisseurs du Veda déclarent que le fruit spirituel de ces deux dons est égal.
Narada (teaching Dana-Dharma in the Narada Purana discourse tradition)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It teaches that the merit (puṇya/phala) of charity is judged by sincerity and capacity, not by absolute monetary size—so a small gift given by the poor can equal a vast gift given by the rich.
By valuing intention over magnitude, it aligns with bhakti’s emphasis on heartfelt offering—what matters is the devotee’s inner dedication rather than external display.
It primarily reflects Dharma-śāstra style reasoning (ethical application of Vedic authority): charity should be calibrated to one’s śakti (means), indicating a practical rule for ritualized giving rather than a technical Vedanga like Vyākaraṇa.