Karmic Causes of Narakas and the Irremediability of Ingratitude (Kṛtaghna-doṣa)
निमन्त्रितो ऽन्यतो भुङ्क्ते श्राद्धे दैवे सपैतृके स द्विधा कृष्यते मूढस्तीक्ष्णतुण्डैः खगोत्तमैः
nimantrito 'nyato bhuṅkte śrāddhe daive sapaitṛke sa dvidhā kṛṣyate mūḍhastīkṣṇatuṇḍaiḥ khagottamaiḥ
ผู้ใดได้รับเชิญแล้วแต่ในพิธีศราทธะ—ไม่ว่าจะเป็นพิธีแด่เทวะหรือพร้อมบรรพชน—กลับไปกินที่อื่น ผู้นั้นผู้หลงย่อมถูกนกชั้นเลิศที่มีจะงอยปากแหลมลากฉีกไปคนละทิศสองทาง.
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Accepting an invitation to a sacred rite and then eating elsewhere is treated as breach of faith (viśvāsa-bhaṅga) and ritual disrespect. The text underscores that dharma is not only about the act of eating, but about honoring commitment within sacred reciprocity (host–guest, pitṛ–descendant).
Primarily ācāra/karma-kāṇḍa instruction embedded in Purāṇic narration; not directly sarga/pratisarga/vaṃśa. It functions as dharma-nīti appended to ritual sections.
Being “dragged in two directions” mirrors divided loyalty and duplicity. Birds with sharp beaks often symbolize relentless, piercing consequences—small ethical fractures becoming unavoidable suffering.