Adhyaya 15 — Karmic Retribution: Rebirths After Naraka and the King’s Compassion in Hell
शाकहर्ता च हारीतस्तोयहर्ता च चातकः ।
भूर्हर्ता नरकान् गत्वा रौरवादीन् सुदारुणान् ॥
śākahartā ca hārītas toyahartā ca cātakaḥ | bhūhartā narakān gatvā rauravādīn sudāruṇān
Ang magnanakaw ng mga gulay ay nagiging hārīta (luntiang ibon). Ang magnanakaw ng tubig ay nagiging cātaka (ibong-ulan). Ngunit ang magnanakaw ng lupa, matapos mapunta sa kakila-kilabot na mga impiyerno gaya ng Raurava at iba pa, ay dumanas ng matinding pagdurusa.
{ "primaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "secondaryRasa": "dharmic", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Theft of essentials (water) and commons (land) is treated as especially grave. Land theft is singled out for naraka-punishment, reflecting its broad harm: it destroys livelihood, lineage security, and social stability.
This is a naraka/karma-vipāka ethical unit, not pañcalakṣaṇa cosmology or dynastic narration.
Water symbolizes life-force and shared sustenance; stealing it yields birth as a creature defined by thirst for rain. Land symbolizes the ‘ground’ of dharma and order; violating it leads to descent into Raurava—an image of being uprooted from moral ground.