Āloka-dāna (Dīpa-dāna), Sumanas–Dhūpa–Dīpa Phala: Manu–Suvarṇa and Śukra–Bali Exempla
शुक्र उवाच तप: पूर्व समुत्पन्नं धर्मस्तस्मादनन्तरम् । एतस्मिन्नन्तरे चैव वीरुदोषध्य एव च
śukra uvāca | tapaḥ pūrvaṃ samutpannaṃ dharmas tasmād anantaram | etasminn antare caiva vīrudhoṣadhaya eva ca |
舒克罗说道:“大王啊,先有苦行(tapas)之生起;其后方有法(dharma)之兴。就在二者之间,藤蔓与诸般药草也随之显现。”
शुक्र उवाच
The verse presents a moral-cosmic sequence: disciplined austerity (tapas) is portrayed as preceding and enabling the emergence of dharma (righteous order). It implies that inner restraint and spiritual effort are foundational for ethical life and social order.
Śukra is instructing a king, explaining an account of primordial emergence: first tapas arose, then dharma; and in the intervening phase, vegetation—creepers and medicinal herbs—appeared, linking ethical order with the unfolding of the natural world.