Gārhasthya-Śreṣṭhatā and Kṣatriya-Daṇḍadhāraṇa
Householder Primacy and the Royal Duty of Punishment
एक दिन लिखित शंखके आश्रमपर आये। दैवेच्छासे शंख भी उसी समय आश्रमसे बाहर निकल गये थे ।। सो5भिगम्याश्रमं भ्रातु: शंखस्य लिखितस्तदा । फलानि पातयामास सम्यक्परिणतान्युत
so’bhigamyāśramaṁ bhrātuḥ śaṅkhasya likhitastadā | phalāni pātayāmāsa samyak-pariṇatāny uta ||
Sinabi ni Vyāsa: “Nang magkagayon, nagtungo si Likhita sa āśrama ng kanyang kapatid na si Śaṅkha. Sa sandaling iyon, ayon sa ikot ng tadhana, nakalabas si Śaṅkha mula sa ermitanyo. At si Likhita ay nagpagbagsak ng mga bungang ganap nang hinog (mula sa mga puno).”
व्यास उवाच
The verse sets up the principle that dharma is sensitive to intention, ownership, and permission: even taking or using what belongs to another—here, causing fruits to fall at another’s hermitage—can become ethically significant, especially for those committed to restraint and righteousness.
Likhita arrives at his brother Śaṅkha’s hermitage. By coincidence (daiva), Śaṅkha is away at that moment. Likhita then makes ripe fruits fall from the trees, an action that will lead into the ensuing moral-legal consequences in the Śaṅkha–Likhita episode.