Prohibitions and Rules of Right Conduct (Ācāra): Theft, Speech, Purity, Residence, and Social Boundaries
तृणं काष्ठं फलं पुष्पं प्रकाशं वै हरेद्बुधः । धर्मार्थं केवलं प्राहुरन्यथा पतितो भवेत्
tṛṇaṃ kāṣṭhaṃ phalaṃ puṣpaṃ prakāśaṃ vai haredbudhaḥ | dharmārthaṃ kevalaṃ prāhuranyathā patito bhavet
O sábio pode tomar apenas erva, lenha, fruto, flores e luz (como lâmpada ou chama), e isso somente por causa do dharma; de outro modo, tornar-se-ia decaído.
Unspecified (narratorial/teachings context within Svarga-khaṇḍa; exact speaker not provided in the input)
Concept: Even permissible taking becomes adharma if not strictly for dharma; restraint is the boundary between necessity and fall.
Application: Practice ‘need-only’ consumption; when borrowing/using communal or temple resources, do so transparently and only for service; avoid rationalizing convenience as righteousness.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A quiet forest hermitage at dawn: a thoughtful brāhmaṇa gathers only fallen twigs, a few fruits, and flowers, while a small oil lamp glows before a Viṣṇu altar. In the background, untouched trees and a calm path suggest restraint; a faint shadow of ‘fall’—a steep ravine—symbolizes the danger of taking beyond dharma.","primary_figures":["a contemplative brāhmaṇa/ṛṣi","Viṣṇu (as a small shrine icon or śālagrāma on altar)","forest hermitage attendants (optional)"],"setting":"āśrama edge near a woodland path; simple altar with lamp, tulasī pot (optional), and offering plate","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["sandalwood beige","leaf green","lamp-flame amber","lotus pink","deep sapphire"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a serene Viṣṇu shrine with a glowing dīpa, a wise brāhmaṇa offering a few flowers and fruits, gold leaf halo around the deity icon, rich vermilion and emerald textiles, ornate arch (prabhāvali), gem-studded ornaments, emphasizing minimal offerings as sacred restraint.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: delicate forest hermitage scene at sunrise, a restrained ascetic collecting fallen twigs and a single fruit, lyrical naturalism with fine brushwork, cool greens and soft ochres, distant hills and a winding path, refined facial features conveying ethical resolve.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines, warm earth pigments, a small Viṣṇu sanctum with lamp-lit glow, the brāhmaṇa in simple white cloth holding flowers and fruit, stylized foliage, characteristic large eyes, red-yellow-green palette with sacred geometry borders.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central lamp and offering tray before a small Viṣṇu/Śālagrāma altar, lotus and tulasī motifs framing the border, intricate floral patterns, deep indigo background with gold highlights, peacocks perched quietly to symbolize vigilance and purity."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"reverent-soft","sound_elements":["soft temple bells","forest birds","gentle wind in leaves","lamp crackle","silence between lines"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: हरेद्बुधः → haret budhaḥ; प्राहुरन्यथा → prāhuḥ anyathā.
It teaches restraint: taking natural items is permitted only when it serves dharma (a legitimate religious or righteous necessity). Taking them for other motives leads to moral/spiritual fall.
It commonly implies light needed for basic religious or practical necessity—such as a lamp or flame—rather than luxury or hoarding.
Use resources minimally and with ethical intent: take only what is necessary and justified (especially for religious duties), avoiding appropriation driven by greed or convenience.