Hari-nāma Mahimā and Caraṇāmṛta: The Redemption of the Hunter Gulika
Uttaṅka Itihāsa
यावदर्जयति द्रव्यं बांधवास्तावदेव हि । धर्माधर्मौ सहैवास्तामिहामुत्र न चापरः ॥ ४२ ॥
yāvadarjayati dravyaṃ bāṃdhavāstāvadeva hi | dharmādharmau sahaivāstāmihāmutra na cāparaḥ || 42 ||
只要人不断积聚财物,亲族便确实围绕在旁;然而唯有正法与非法随身相伴——此世与来世皆然,别无他伴。
Narada
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
It teaches vairāgya: social support often depends on wealth, but one’s karmic record—Dharma and Adharma—alone accompanies the soul in both this life and the afterlife.
By exposing the unreliability of wealth-based relationships, it redirects the seeker toward lasting refuge—living by Dharma, which in the Narada Purana culminates in devotion and surrender to the Supreme as the stable support beyond death.
The verse primarily highlights karma-dharma ethics rather than a specific Vedāṅga; the practical takeaway is disciplined conduct (ācāra) and conscious choice of Dharma over Adharma, since actions alone yield enduring results.