Dietary Rules & Purification — Dietary Rules, Purification (Śauca), and the Duties of the Householder and Forest-Dweller
शुचि भैक्षं कारुहस्तः पण्यं योषिन्मुखं तथा रथ्यागतमविज्ञातं दासवर्गेण यत्कृतम्
śuci bhaikṣaṃ kāruhastaḥ paṇyaṃ yoṣinmukhaṃ tathā rathyāgatamavijñātaṃ dāsavargeṇa yatkṛtam
Makanan sedekah (bhikṣā) dianggap suci; barang dagangan yang disentuh tangan tukang (perlu diteliti dengan cermat dari segi kesucian); demikian juga sentuhan mulut seorang wanita; barang yang tidak diketahui asalnya yang diperoleh dari jalan; dan apa yang dibuat oleh golongan hamba/khadam—(semuanya termasuk kategori yang dibahas dalam penentuan kesucian dan kebolehterimaan).
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The verse reflects a dharma-text tendency to classify sources and contacts by perceived purity risk, emphasizing vigilance about provenance (unknown street items) and contamination (mouth-contact) for those pursuing ritual cleanliness.
Ancillary dharma/ācāra guidance rather than the Purāṇic fivefold cosmological-genealogical framework.
‘Unknown from the street’ symbolizes uncontrolled contact and uncertain lineage/provenance; ‘mouth’ symbolizes the intimate boundary of bodily impurity; together they encode a broader principle: purity depends on traceability and controlled handling.