(अत्यन्तापदि मग्नानां परित्राणं हि कुर्वताम् । या गतिर्विदिता त्वद्य नरके शरणं भवान् ।।
cayavana uvāca | kṛpaṇasya ca yac cakṣur muneś ca śīviṣasya ca | naraṃ samūlaṃ dahati kakṣam agnir iva jvalan ||
च्यवन बोले—निषादो! दीन-दुखी की, मुनि की तथा विषधर सर्प की क्रोधपूर्ण दृष्टि मनुष्य को जड़-मूल सहित वैसे ही जला डालती है, जैसे प्रज्वलित अग्नि सूखी घास-फूस की झाड़ी को भस्म कर देती है।
च्यवन उवाच
Do not injure or contemptuously provoke the helpless, the spiritually accomplished, or dangerous beings; their wrath (symbolized by the ‘glance’) can bring complete destruction. The ethical lesson is restraint, compassion, and reverence for moral and ascetic power.
Cayavana delivers a warning statement: certain beings—an afflicted person, a sage, and a venomous serpent—can be devastating when angered. He illustrates this with a simile of blazing fire consuming dry brush, emphasizing the immediacy and totality of the consequence.