The Merit of Śravaṇa-Dvādaśī and the Liberation of a Preta through Gayā Piṇḍa-Rites
ततो मयोक्तः स भ्राता विभजाम गृहं वयम् तेनोक्तो नैव भवतो विद्यते भागा इत्यहम्
tato mayoktaḥ sa bhrātā vibhajāma gṛhaṃ vayam tenokto naiva bhavato vidyate bhāgā ityaham
அப்போது நான் அந்த அண்ணனிடம், ‘வீட்டு சொத்தைப் பகிர்ந்து கொள்வோம்’ என்று சொன்னேன். அவன், ‘உனக்கு எந்தப் பங்கும் இல்லை’ என்று என்னிடம் கூறினான்.
{ "primaryRasa": "raudra", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
In such dharma-narrative contexts, gṛha commonly functions as shorthand for the household estate—house, land, goods, and the economic unit—rather than merely the building.
It introduces the legal/dharmic controversy that the next verse grounds in a rule-like list of persons deemed ineligible for inheritance, reflecting a normative (though historically contested) strand of Dharmaśāstra-style social regulation.