सर्वेष्वपि च कार्येषु हेतिशब्दो विगर्हितः । कुर्वतामतिकार्याणि शिलापातो ध्रुवं भवेत्
sarveṣvapi ca kāryeṣu hetiśabdo vigarhitaḥ | kurvatāmatikāryāṇi śilāpāto dhruvaṃ bhavet
सब कार्यों में ‘हेति’—अर्थात् कठोर, शस्त्रवत् प्रत्युत्तर—निंदित है; जो मर्यादा लाँघकर कर्म करते हैं, उन पर पत्थरों का पतन—निश्चित विनाश—आ ही पड़ता है।
First-person narrator continuing (unnamed), citing an old gāthā within Māheśvarakhaṇḍa narrative
Scene: A teacher-sage instructs disciples: one figure holds a symbolic ‘weapon’ shaped like a word, while above them stones tumble—an allegory of ruin from transgressive acts.
Self-control in speech and action is dharma; harsh words and overreach invite inevitable downfall.
None; the verse is a general nīti teaching rather than a place-glorification.
No ritual is prescribed; it prescribes ethical restraint—avoid hostile speech and excessive actions.