Snātaka and Gṛhastha-Dharma: Conduct, Marriage Norms, Daily Rites, and Liberating Virtues
न धर्मं ख्यापयेद् विद्वान् न पापं गूहयेदपि / कुर्वोतात्महितं नित्यं सर्वभूतानिकम्पकः
na dharmaṃ khyāpayed vidvān na pāpaṃ gūhayedapi / kurvotātmahitaṃ nityaṃ sarvabhūtānikampakaḥ
Người trí không nên phô bày đức hạnh của mình, cũng không nên che giấu điều ác. Hãy luôn làm điều lợi ích chân thật cho tự thân, với lòng thương xót đối với mọi loài hữu tình.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing in a dharma-teaching context
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
By urging “ātmahita” (the Self’s true welfare), the verse points to an inner standard of good beyond social display—conduct aligned with the deeper Self, not mere reputation.
It emphasizes ethical discipline akin to yama-niyama: humility (not advertising virtue), truthfulness/accountability (not concealing wrongdoing), and compassion to all beings—foundational supports for Pashupata-oriented and broader Yoga practice in the Kurma Purana.
While not naming them directly, the teaching reflects the Kurma Purana’s shared Shaiva-Vaishnava ethic: inner purity, truthful responsibility, and universal compassion—virtues upheld across both traditions rather than sectarian difference.