Rāma’s Abhiṣeka Plan, Kaikeyī’s Boon, and the Initiation of the Exile
Mārkaṇḍeya’s Account
सपुत्रदारो हि मुनि: पक्षाहारो बभूव ह । कपोततवृत्त्या पक्षेण व्रीहिद्रोणमुपार्जयत्,उन्होंने अतिथियोंकी सेवाका व्रत ले रखा था। वे बड़े कर्मनिष्ठ और तपस्वी थे तथा कापोती वृत्तिका आश्रय ले आवश्यकताके अनुरूप थोड़े-से ही अन्नका संग्रह करते थे। वे मुनि स्त्री और पुत्रके साथ रहकर पंद्रह दिनमें जैसे कबूतर दाने चुगता है, उसी प्रकार चुनकर एक द्रोण धानका संग्रह कर पाते थे और उसके द्वारा इष्टीकृत नामक यज्ञका अनुष्ठान करते थे। इस प्रकार परिवारसहित उन्हें पंद्रह दिनपर भोजन प्राप्त होता था
saputradāro hi muniḥ pakṣāhāro babhūva ha | kapotavṛttyā pakṣeṇa vrīhidrōṇam upārjayat |
Vyāsa said: That sage, living together with his wife and son, used to eat only once in a fortnight. Following the ‘pigeon’s way of life’—gathering only what is needed—he would, over the course of fifteen days, pick up and accumulate a single droṇa-measure of rice. Bound by a vow of serving guests, steadfast in action and austerity, he maintained his household on this sparse store, using it for his sacrificial observances and sustaining his family with food that came only at the end of each fortnight.
व्यास उवाच
The verse highlights disciplined living and ethical restraint: even while supporting a family, one can practice austerity, avoid hoarding, and uphold dharma—especially hospitality and sacrificial obligations—by gathering only what is necessary.
Vyāsa describes a sage who lives with his wife and son and eats only once every fortnight. He follows ‘kapota-vṛtti,’ collecting small amounts like a pigeon until he has a droṇa of rice over fifteen days, which sustains the household and supports ritual duties.