पञ्चवर्णोत्पत्तिः — The Origin of the Five-Colored Fiery Being and Ritual-Disruptor Lineages
अनसूयु: कृतज्ञश्न कल्याणानि च सेवते । सुखानि धर्ममर्थ च स्वर्ग च लभते नर:,पुण्यात्मा मनुष्य दोषदृष्टिसे रहित और कृतज्ञ होकर कल्याणकारी कर्मोंका सेवन करता है तथा उसे सुख, धर्म, अर्थ एवं स्वर्गकी प्राप्ति होती है
anasūyuḥ kṛtajñaś ca kalyāṇāni ca sevate | sukhāni dharmam arthaṃ ca svargaṃ ca labhate naraḥ ||
บุคคลผู้ไม่เพ่งโทษผู้อื่น มีความกตัญญู และคบหากระทำแต่กิจอันเป็นมงคล ย่อมได้สุข ได้ธรรม ได้ทรัพย์ และได้สวรรค์ในที่สุด
व्याध उवाच
Cultivate anasūyā (non-fault-finding, non-enviousness) and kṛtajñatā (gratitude), and consistently practice kalyāṇa (wholesome conduct). Such inner discipline and outward goodness yield happiness, support dharma and artha, and lead to svarga.
In the Vyādha’s instruction (the hunter as moral teacher), he summarizes a practical ethic: the listener should abandon the habit of seeing others’ faults, remain grateful, and choose beneficial actions—presenting these as the causes of both worldly welfare and otherworldly reward.