दानफलप्रकरणम् — उपानहदानं, तिलदानं, भूमिदानं, गोदानं, अन्नदानं च
Gifts and Their Stated Results: Footwear, Sesame, Land, Cows, and Food
यथाप्सु पतित: शक्र तैलबिन्दुर्विसर्पति । तथा भूमिकृतं दानं सस्ये सस्ये विवर्धते
yathāpsu patitaḥ śakra tailabindur visarpatī | tathā bhūmikṛtaṃ dānaṃ sasye sasye vivardhate ||
Wika ni Bhishma: “O Śakra (Indra)! Kung paanong ang isang patak ng langis na nahulog sa tubig ay kumakalat sa lahat ng dako, gayundin ang handog na lupa ay patuloy na tumataas ang halaga—sa tuwing may ani na tutubo sa lupang iyon, ang bisa at kabanalan ng pag-aalay ay lalo pang dumarami.”
भीष्म उवाच
A land-gift is uniquely enduring: its benefit and the donor’s merit do not remain fixed but expand over time, because every new harvest generated from that land continually amplifies the donation’s value and ethical significance.
In Bhīṣma’s instruction on dāna-dharma (the duty and principles of giving) within the Anuśāsana Parva, he addresses Śakra (Indra) and uses a vivid simile—oil spreading on water—to explain how the fruits of donating land keep spreading and increasing through successive harvests.