नर उवाच । अतिमूर्खोसि विप्रत्वं प्रज्ञावादांश्च भाषसे । किं न श्रुतस्त्वया श्लोकः पुराविद्भिरुदीरितः । कूपोन्यस्य घटोऽन्यस्य रज्जुरन्यस्य भारत
nara uvāca | atimūrkhosi vipratvaṃ prajñāvādāṃśca bhāṣase | kiṃ na śrutastvayā ślokaḥ purāvidbhirudīritaḥ | kūponyasya ghaṭo'nyasya rajjuranyasya bhārata
L’homme dit : «Tu es d’une extrême sottise, bien que tu profères des paroles au ton savant. N’as-tu pas entendu le śloka récité par les sages d’autrefois : “Le puits est à l’un, la jarre à un autre, et la corde à un autre encore, ô Bhārata” ?»
Nara (the man)
Scene: A disputation at a village well: a man rebukes a learned speaker, pointing to the well, pot, and rope as symbols of shared means and shared benefit.
The verse invokes a proverb about shared instruments and mixed ownership to argue about entitlement and participation—used here to challenge rigid refusal.
No tīrtha is named; it is a debate scene using a traditional maxim (nyāya).
None; the shloka is argumentative, employing a proverb to make a point about access/acceptance.