शबलं प्रोच्यते सद्भिर्द्यूतचौर्येण साहसैः । व्याजेनोपार्जितं यच्च तत्कृष्णं समुदाहृतम्
śabalaṃ procyate sadbhirdyūtacauryeṇa sāhasaiḥ | vyājenopārjitaṃ yacca tatkṛṣṇaṃ samudāhṛtam
Les hommes de bien nomment ‘mêlée’ (śabala) la richesse acquise par le jeu, le vol et les actes violents ou téméraires. Mais ce qui est gagné par de faux prétextes et la fraude est déclaré ‘noir’ (impur).
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta) to the sages
Scene: A cautionary allegory: on one side, gamblers and thieves in shadowy tones; on the other, a figure offering a darkened coin-bag to a shrine while a sage raises a hand in prohibition; ‘black smoke’ symbolism around deceitful wealth.
Not all wealth is spiritually equivalent; deceitful and harmful earnings degrade one’s religious acts and lead to darker karmic results.
No tīrtha is mentioned; the verse gives a universal ethical classification relevant to Purāṇic dharma.
It warns that dāna supported by fraud, theft, or gambling is spiritually compromised, and fraudulent gain is outright ‘black’ (kṛṣṇa).