हुन्त्वंकृत्याप्रियं ब्रूते मूका सा जायते खलु । या सपत्नीं सदैर्ष्येत दुर्भगा सा पुनःपुनः । दृष्टिं विलुप्य भर्तुर्या कंचिदन्यं समीक्षते
huntvaṃkṛtyāpriyaṃ brūte mūkā sā jāyate khalu | yā sapatnīṃ sadairṣyeta durbhagā sā punaḥpunaḥ | dṛṣṭiṃ vilupya bharturyā kaṃcidanyaṃ samīkṣate
Celle qui, après avoir fait du tort, profère des paroles déplaisantes naît assurément muette. Celle qui jalouse sans cesse la coépouse redevient malheureuse encore et encore. Et celle qui détourne les yeux de son mari pour regarder un autre homme avec intention subit perte et souillure.
Unspecified (Dharmāraṇya Khaṇḍa narrative voice; likely Sūta/Lomaharṣaṇa conveying dharma-teaching)
Tirtha: Dharmāraṇya
Type: kshetra
Scene: Three linked vignettes: (1) a woman speaking harshly after causing harm, her mouth symbolically sealed; (2) a jealous co-wife scene with greenish envy aura; (3) a woman’s sidelong gaze toward another man while husband stands nearby, with a dark ‘kalaṅka’ shadow marking consequence.
It warns against harmful speech, jealousy, and disloyal intent—inner faults that ripen into suffering.
No site is mentioned; the verse teaches moral discipline.
None; it prescribes purification of speech and mind through restraint.