Yamapatha (The Road of Yama), Dāna-Phala, and the Imperishable Fruition of Karma
तथैव यातना भोज्याः किं वृथा ह्यतिदुरिवताः । भृत्यमित्रकलत्रार्थं दुष्कृतं चरितं यथा ॥ ४७ ॥
tathaiva yātanā bhojyāḥ kiṃ vṛthā hyatidurivatāḥ | bhṛtyamitrakalatrārthaṃ duṣkṛtaṃ caritaṃ yathā || 47 ||
同じく、その責め苦は必ず味わわねばならぬ。ではなぜ、むだに過度の苦しみを招くのか。僕や友や妻のために悪業を行い、そのとおりに苦を受けるのである。
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a didactic context on karma and its results)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
It warns that suffering (yātanā) is the unavoidable fruit of duṣkṛta, and that committing wrong for social attachments only multiplies misery—prompting dharma and detachment.
By exposing the futility of sin done for worldly bonds, it redirects the mind toward a higher refuge—steadfast dharma and devotion to the Lord rather than dependence on transient relationships.
No specific Vedanga is taught here; the practical takeaway is dharma-nīti: avoid adharma motivated by artha and attachment, since karma-phala inevitably returns as suffering.