The Greatness of the Gaṅgā (Gaṅgā-māhātmya): Saudāsa/Kalmāṣapāda’s Curse and Release
अपश्यन्मानुषं मासं परमेण समाधिना । अहोऽस्य राज्ञो दौःशील्यमभक्ष्यं दत्तवान्मम ॥ २४ ॥
apaśyanmānuṣaṃ māsaṃ parameṇa samādhinā | aho'sya rājño dauḥśīlyamabhakṣyaṃ dattavānmama || 24 ||
អស់រយៈពេលមួយខែរបស់មនុស្ស ខ្ញុំមិនបានដឹងខ្លួនឡើយ ដោយបានចូលក្នុងសមាធិដ៏ខ្ពង់ខ្ពស់។ ឱ! ស្តេចអង្គនេះពិតជាអាក្រក់ណាស់ ទ្រង់បានប្រទាននូវអ្វីដែលមិនគួរទទួលទានដល់ខ្ញុំ។
Narada (narrative voice within the dialogue tradition, describing an incident as a moral critique)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
It contrasts inner absorption (samādhi) with outer dharma: even a holy person can be harmed by adharmic offerings, so purity and righteousness in giving are spiritually decisive.
Bhakti is not only meditation; it is sustained by sattvic conduct. A king’s impure gift (abhakṣya) undermines sacred exchange, showing that devotion must be supported by ethical living and pure offerings.
It points to dharma-śāstra style discipline about śuddhi (purity) and abhakṣya (forbidden foods), a practical rule-set closely tied to ritual correctness (kalpa) and daily conduct.