Adhyaya 8 — Harishchandra’s Trial: Truth, the Sale of Family, and Bondage to a Chandala
नानामेदोवसामज्जा लिप्तपाण्यङ्गुलिः श्वसन् ।
नानाशवोदनकृता हारतृप्तिपरायणः ॥
nānā-medo-vasā-majjā-lipta-pāṇy-aṅguliḥ śvasan / nānā-śavodana-kṛtā-hāra-tṛpti-parāyaṇaḥ
Dengan nafas tercungap-cungap, jari-jarinya disapu pelbagai lemak, gris dan sumsum; dia hidup semata-mata untuk memuaskan lapar—memakan nasi yang dimasak daripada banyak mayat (yakni makanan yang diperoleh berkaitan dengan orang mati).
{ "primaryRasa": "bibhatsa", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The Purāṇic style uses revulsion to teach restraint: when one abandons dharma, the mind can normalize what is ordinarily forbidden, even living from death and pollution. Hunger and compulsion become metaphors for uncontrolled desire.
Carita (exemplum) illustrating karmic consequence; ancillary to dharma-teaching rather than cosmological Sarga/Manvantara material.
‘Food from corpses’ can be read symbolically as consuming the results of dead actions—living on residues of past karma—until insight or expiation breaks the cycle.