Adhyaya 29 — Alarka’s Inquiry and Madalasa’s Teaching on Householder Dharma (Gārhasthya), Vaiśvadeva, and Atithi Hospitality
स्कन्धे विधाता देवाश्च पितरश्च महर्षयः । श्रेयोऽभिवर्षिणः सर्वे तथैवातिथिबान्धवाः ॥
skandhe vidhātā devāś ca pitaraś ca maharṣayaḥ | śreyo 'bhivarṣiṇaḥ sarve tathaivātithibāndhavāḥ ||
その肩には創造主、神々、祖霊、そして大聖仙たちが(負わされて)いる。まことに彼らは皆、彼に安寧を注ぎ与える。同様に客人と親族もまた然り。
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "bhakti", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The householder is portrayed as the social and ritual pillar: by sustaining guests, kin, and rites, he earns the blessings of cosmic and ancestral orders.
Ācāra/Dharma instruction; it supports purāṇic worldview but is not itself sarga/manvantara/vaṃśa narration.
‘On the shoulder’ suggests the embodied self as the bearer of cosmic obligations: when dharma is carried, higher forces ‘rain’ śreyas—inner clarity and harmony.