प्रीणनं लालनं पोषं रंजनं मार्दवं दयाम् । कृत्वा वधूमुपगमेद्युवतीं प्रेमवान्पतिः । युवतौ कुसुमे चैव विधेयं सुखमिच्छता
prīṇanaṃ lālanaṃ poṣaṃ raṃjanaṃ mārdavaṃ dayām | kṛtvā vadhūmupagamedyuvatīṃ premavānpatiḥ | yuvatau kusume caiva vidheyaṃ sukhamicchatā
O marido amoroso, depois de agradá-la, acarinhá-la, sustentá-la, encantá-la e mostrar brandura e compaixão, deve então aproximar-se de sua jovem esposa. Quem busca a felicidade deve agir com a jovem como com uma flor: com delicadeza.
Rājñī (the Queen, concluding instruction by context)
Listener: king (and by extension householders)
Scene: A husband offers ornaments/garlands, gently attending to his bride; the flower metaphor appears visually—he holds a lotus or jasmine, mirroring the delicacy with which he approaches her.
Happiness in married life arises from tenderness, care, and compassion—never from coercion.
No tīrtha is glorified; the verse teaches gṛhastha-dharma (householder ethics).
No formal rite is prescribed; it prescribes dharmic conduct (gentleness, care) as an ethical discipline.