सप्तहोतृ-विधानम् एवं इन्द्रिय–मनःसंवादः
The Seven Hotṛs and the Debate of Senses and Mind
अगारमद्वारमिव प्रविश्य संकल्पभोगान् विषये निबद्धान् | प्राणक्षये शान्तिमुपैति नित्यं दारुक्षयेडग्निज्वलितो यथैव
agāram advāram iva praviśya saṅkalpabhogān viṣaye nibaddhān | prāṇakṣaye śāntim upaiti nityaṃ dārukṣaye 'gnijvalito yathaiva ||
心は言った。「戸のない家に忍び入る者のように感官の世界へ入り、心の作りごとから生まれ、対象に縛られた享楽を食み続ける。だが生命の力が尽きるとき、必ず静けさに至る――燃えさかる火も、薪が焼き尽くされれば自ずから消えるように。」
मन उवाच
Sense-enjoyments driven by saṅkalpa (mental projections) keep one bound to objects, but such enjoyment is self-exhausting; when the life-force and craving-energy run out, the mind naturally becomes quiet—like fire that goes out when fuel is finished. The ethical thrust is toward recognizing the futility of compulsive indulgence and cultivating detachment before exhaustion forces it.
In a didactic passage, the speaker ‘Mind’ explains its own movement into the realm of sense-objects and uses two images—entering a doorless house and a fire consuming fuel—to describe how beings get caught in constructed enjoyments and how peace can arise when the sustaining fuel (vitality and desire) is depleted.