Adhyaya 8 — Harishchandra’s Trial: Truth, the Sale of Family, and Bondage to a Chandala
स गत्वा वसुधापालो दिव्यां वाराणसीं पुरीम् । नैषा मनुष्यभोग्येति शूलपाणेः परिग्रहः ॥
sa gatvā vasudhāpālo divyāṁ vārāṇasīṁ purīm / naiṣā manuṣyabhogyeti śūlapāṇeḥ parigrahaḥ //
ព្រះរាជាអធិរាជនោះបានទៅដល់ទីក្រុងទេវៈ វារាណាសី ហើយបានដឹងថា៖ «ទីនេះមិនមែនជាទីសម្រាប់មនុស្សរីករាយទេ; វាជាកម្មសិទ្ធិរបស់ សូលបាណិ (ព្រះសិវៈ អ្នកកាន់ត្រីសូល)»។
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Even a king—symbol of worldly authority—must recognize limits set by Dharma: certain realms (kṣetras) are not objects for exploitation or pleasure. The verse teaches restraint (saṁyama) and reverence: the sacred is approached for purification and devotion, not for consumption or ownership.
This verse aligns most closely with Vamśānucarita/Carita (narrative of exemplary conduct) and indirectly supports Dharma-oriented kṣetra-māhātmya material rather than Sarga/Pratisarga/Manvantara proper. It functions as a didactic episode within the Purāṇic narrative framework.
Vārāṇasī is presented as a ‘divine city’ under Śiva’s direct lordship; calling it ‘not for human enjoyment’ signals that the kṣetra is a liminal space where ordinary egoic appropriation must cease. Esoterically, the ‘king’ can also symbolize the ruling ego-mind, which, upon entering the sacred interior (Kāśī), must surrender claims of possession to the higher Lord (Śiva).