Ahiṃsā as Threefold Restraint (Mind–Speech–Action) and the Ethics of Consumption
ततः पश्चान्महाराज कृमियोनौ प्रजायते । कृमिर्विशतिवर्षाणि भूत्वा जायति मानुष:,महाराज! तदनन्तर वह कीड़ेकी योनिमें जन्म लेता है और बीस वर्षोंतक कीट-योनिमें रहकर अन्तमें मनुष्य होता है
tataḥ paścān mahārāja kṛmiyonau prajāyate | kṛmir viśati-varṣāṇi bhūtvā jāyati mānuṣaḥ ||
坚战说道:“其后,噢大王,他将投生于虫之胎。为虫二十年后,方才再得转生为人。”
युधिछिर उवाच
The verse underscores karmic consequence and moral causality: certain actions can lead to degrading rebirths, yet the cycle also allows eventual return to human birth after undergoing the appropriate fruition of karma.
Yudhiṣṭhira describes a sequence of rebirth: after a prior stage (implied by the surrounding discussion), the being is born as a worm, remains in that state for twenty years, and then is reborn as a human—illustrating the graded results of deeds across lives.