अकार्यं क्रियते मूढैः प्रायः क्रोधसमन्वितैः । क्रोधेन नश्यते कीर्तिः क्रोधो हंति स्थिरां श्रियम्
akāryaṃ kriyate mūḍhaiḥ prāyaḥ krodhasamanvitaiḥ | krodhena naśyate kīrtiḥ krodho haṃti sthirāṃ śriyam
غصّے میں گرفتار نادان لوگ اکثر وہی کر بیٹھتے ہیں جو نہیں کرنا چاہیے۔ غصّے سے نیک نامی مٹ جاتی ہے؛ غصّہ پائیدار دولت و اقبال کو بھی ہلاک کر دیتا ہے۔
Pārvatī/Umā (gnomic reflection within narration; speaker inferred from immediate context)
Scene: Didactic tableau: Devī (or a sage-figure) articulates a moral maxim—anger makes fools commit wrong; anger ruins fame and prosperity—while listeners absorb the teaching.
Mastery over anger is essential for dharma; uncontrolled krodha ruins both reputation (kīrti) and lasting well-being (śrī).
No holy site is praised in this verse; it is a universal ethical maxim within the narrative.
No ritual is prescribed; the teaching is inner discipline—anger control as practical dharma.