Brahmā’s Discourse to Mohinī
Harivāsara, Desire, and the Satya-Test of Rukmāṅgada
तस्मान्न वीक्षयेन्नारीं सुतां वापि वधूं नरः । साभिलाषेण मनसा तत्क्षणात्पतते नरः ॥ २१ ॥
tasmānna vīkṣayennārīṃ sutāṃ vāpi vadhūṃ naraḥ | sābhilāṣeṇa manasā tatkṣaṇātpatate naraḥ || 21 ||
ฉะนั้นบุรุษไม่พึงจ้องมองสตรี—แม้เป็นบุตรีของตนหรือบุตรสะใภ้—ด้วยจิตที่ย้อมด้วยกาม; ในขณะนั้นเองย่อมตกจากธรรมะ
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Rasa: {"primary_rasa":"shanta","secondary_rasa":"bhayanaka","emotional_journey":"Begins as a sober injunction on restraint, then sharpens into fear of immediate moral downfall through lustful gaze."}
It teaches that inner intention (the desirous mind) is decisive in dharma: even a moment of lustful regard causes a moral and spiritual decline, so vigilance over thought and sight is essential.
Bhakti requires purity (śuddhi) and sense-restraint; by warning against lustful attention, the verse safeguards the devotee’s mind so it can remain steady in remembrance of the Divine rather than pulled outward by desire.
It aligns with śikṣā and dharma-śāstra style discipline: training attention, speech, and conduct (sadācāra) as practical supports for study, ritual life, and sustained spiritual practice.