Adhyaya 29 — Alarka’s Inquiry and Madalasa’s Teaching on Householder Dharma (Gārhasthya), Vaiśvadeva, and Atithi Hospitality
स पापं केवलं भुङ्क्ते पुरीषञ्चान्यजन्मनि ।
अतिथिर्यस्य भग्नाशो गृहात् प्रतिनिवर्तते ॥
sa pāpaṃ kevalaṃ bhuṅkte purīṣaṃ cānyajanmani / atithir yasya bhagnāśo gṛhāt pratinivartate
Ele come apenas pecado—e, em outro nascimento, até excremento—se um hóspede, com a esperança quebrada, volta atrás desde sua casa.
{ "primaryRasa": "bhaya", "secondaryRasa": "dharma", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Denying hospitality is treated as a grave breach: it inverts nourishment into impurity, emphasizing that social cruelty corrupts even one’s own enjoyment.
Ethical instruction (ācāra/dharma) rather than pancalakṣaṇa narrative-cosmology.
‘Eating excrement’ symbolizes the degradation of consciousness when one refuses compassion; the mind consumes what it morally produces.