Gautama–Śakra Saṃvāda: Karma, Loka-bheda, and the Restoration of the Elephant
गौतम उवाच रथन्तरं यत्र बृहच्च गीयते यत्र वेदी पुण्डरीकैस्तृणोति । यत्रोपयाति हरिभि: सोमपीथी तत्र त्वाहं हस्तिनं यातयिष्ये
gautama uvāca | rathantaraṃ yatra bṛhacca gīyate yatra vedī puṇḍarīkais tṛṇoti | yatro payāti haribhiḥ somapīthī tatra tvāhaṃ hastinaṃ yātayiṣye ||
ガウタマは言った。「ラタンタラとブリハットのサーマンが歌われ、祭壇が白蓮で散り敷かれ覆われ、ソーマを飲む者が神々の駿馬に乗せられて旅するその境地へ—まさにそこへ私は赴き、そこでお前に我が象を返させる。」
गौतम उवाच
The verse underscores dharma as enforceable moral order: sacred merit and heavenly imagery do not exempt one from restitution. Gautama invokes the highest ritual-heavenly sphere to assert that a wrong (withholding another’s property) must be set right.
Gautama declares that he will pursue the other party even to the exalted realm associated with Sāma-vedic chants and Soma-drinkers, and there compel the return of his elephant—an emphatic vow of recovery and justice.