Karmic Causes of Narakas and the Irremediability of Ingratitude (Kṛtaghna-doṣa)
सूर्येन्दुतारका दृष्टा यैरुच्छिष्टैश्च कामतः तेषां नेत्रगतो वह्निर्धम्यते यमकिङ्करैः
sūryendutārakā dṛṣṭā yairucchiṣṭaiśca kāmataḥ teṣāṃ netragato vahnirdhamyate yamakiṅkaraiḥ
यैरुच्छिष्टैः कामतः सूर्येन्दुतारकाः दृष्टाः, तेषां नेत्रगतो वह्निः यमकिङ्करैर्धम्यते।
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The verse distinguishes inadvertent fault from deliberate transgression: intentional disregard of purity norms (kāmataḥ) is ethically weightier and yields sharper consequences, emphasizing inner intention as a driver of karma.
It functions as dharma-śāstra-like material within a Purāṇa (an instructional interlude), rather than one of the five core lakṣaṇas; it supports the Purāṇic role as a guide to right conduct.
Eyes represent cognition and desire-driven perception; ‘fire in the eyes’ dramatizes how impure, lustful intent corrupts perception itself, turning the faculty of seeing into a site of suffering under moral law (Yama).