Avadhūta’s Teachers: Python, Ocean, Moth, Bee, Elephant, Deer, Fish—and Piṅgalā’s Song of Detachment
मार्ग आगच्छतो वीक्ष्य पुरुषान् पुरुषर्षभ । तान् शुल्कदान् वित्तवत: कान्तान् मेनेऽर्थकामुकी ॥ २४ ॥
mārga āgacchato vīkṣya puruṣān puruṣarṣabha tān śulka-dān vittavataḥ kāntān mene ’rtha-kāmukī
おお人の中の最勝者よ。金を欲して焦れるその遊女は、夜の道に立ち、行き交う男たちを見定めては、「この者は財がある、代価を払い、きっと私の伴いを楽しむだろう」と思った。
This verse shows Pingalā’s conditioned mindset: seeing passersby, she immediately assumes they are wealthy customers for sense enjoyment—illustrating how greed and lust distort perception and bind one to suffering.
He sets up the contrast that follows in the chapter: her repeated disappointment becomes the turning point that awakens detachment (vairāgya) and a search for lasting spiritual happiness.
It warns against projecting happiness onto external ‘arrivals’—money, relationships, pleasures—and encourages cultivating contentment and spiritual focus rather than chasing temporary gratification.