Adhyāya 199: Karma–Jñāna Causality and the Nirguṇa Brahman
Manu’s Instruction
तेभ्य: प्रयच्छ दानानि ये प्रवृत्ता नराधिप । अहं न प्रतिगृह्नामि किमिष्टं कि ददामि ते | ब्रृहि त्वं नृपतिश्रेष्ठ तपसा साधयामि किम्
tebhyaḥ prayaccha dānāni ye pravṛttā narādhipa | ahaṃ na pratigṛhṇāmi kim iṣṭaṃ kiṃ dadāmi te | brūhi tvaṃ nṛpatiśreṣṭha tapasā sādhayāmi kim, nareśvara ||
婆罗门说道:“人中之主啊,把你的布施赐予那些行走于世间生活之道的人吧。我不接受你所施的供养。诸王之最,此刻你所欲为何?我当赐你何物?请明言吧,君王——要我以苦行(tapas)的力量为你成就何事?”
ब्राह्मण उवाच
Charity should be directed appropriately: the Brahmin, aligned with renunciation, declines material gifts and instead offers the fruit of austerity. The verse contrasts pravṛtti (worldly engagement) with a renunciant ethic, suggesting that spiritual power and self-restraint can serve others without attachment to possessions.
A Brahmin addresses a king and instructs him to give donations to those living the active, worldly life. He refuses to accept the king’s gift himself and asks what the king truly seeks, offering to fulfill the king’s purpose through his tapas (ascetic merit) rather than through material exchange.