Adhyaya 3 — The Dharmapakshis’ Past-Life Curse and Indra’s Test of Truthfulness
सत्यशौचक्षमाचारमतीवोदारमानसम् । जिज्ञासुस्तं ऋषिश्रेष्ठमस्मच्छापभवाय च ॥
satya-śauca-kṣamācāramatīvodāramānasam / jijñāsus tam ṛṣiśreṣṭham asmac-chāpa-bhavāya ca
Siya’y tapat sa katotohanan, dalisay, at matiisin sa asal, at may pusong lubhang mapagbigay at marangal. Sa pananabik na makaalam, nilapitan nila ang pinakadakilang pantas—gayundin upang mapawi at mapalaya mula sa aming sumpa.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "bhakti", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The text links spiritual authority to ethical refinement: truth, purity, forbearance, and noble-mindedness qualify one to guide others. It also portrays the proper motive of discipleship—jijñāsā (a sincere desire to know)—combined with a practical aim: freedom from the binding effects of a curse, i.e., karmic consequence.
This verse is primarily within the Purāṇic frame-narrative and ethical characterization rather than a direct instance of the five topics (sarga, pratisarga, vaṃśa, manvantara, vaṃśānucarita). It most closely supports vaṃśānucarita-style narrative framing (biographical description of exemplary persons) and dharma-upadeśa (instructional ethos), which often accompanies the Pancalakṣaṇa materials.
Esoterically, the quartet of virtues (satya, śauca, kṣamā, ācāra) functions as an inner purification sequence: truth aligns speech with reality, purity refines body-mind, forbearance dissolves reactive ego, and right conduct stabilizes realization in daily life. The ‘curse’ can be read symbolically as bondage to limiting conditions; approaching the ‘best of sages’ represents turning to higher discernment to dissolve that bondage.