Dhūpa–Dīpa–Bali Phala Praśna; Nahūṣa–Agastya–Bhṛgu Saṃvāda
Incense, Lamp, and Bali Offerings; the Nahūṣa Dialogue
तत एन सुदर्दुर्बुद्धि धिक्शब्दाभिहतत्विषम् । धरण्यां पातयिष्यामि पश्यतस्ते महामुने
tata enaṁ sudardurbuddhi dhikśabdābhihatatviṣam | dharaṇyāṁ pātayiṣyāmi paśyatas te mahāmune mahāmune |
「そののち、我はこの極めて邪なる心の者を大地へと投げ落とす。四方から轟く『恥を知れ!』の叫びがその輝きを打ち砕くだろう――そしてそれを、汝の眼前で成し遂げるのだ、偉大なる聖仙よ。」
अगस्त्य उवाच
Arrogance and moral blindness lead to the loss of one’s ‘tviṣ’ (splendor/legitimacy). Public censure (‘dhik!’) symbolizes ethical condemnation, and the sage’s act of casting down the offender represents dharmic retribution restoring moral order.
Agastya declares that he will make the ill-minded offender (Nahusha) lose his radiance under the force of reproach and will hurl him down to the earth, doing so in the presence of the addressed great sage.