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Hastasya Bhushanam Danam

हस्तस्य भूषणं दानम् in English · English

🕉️ hindu·📿 3× repetitions·🕐 During reflection on values, while cultivating virtue, or when teaching the young·📜 Niti Shataka of Bhartrhari (Subhashita)
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Meaning

Hastasya Bhushanam Danam is a celebrated verse from Bhartrhari's Niti Shataka on the true ornaments of a human being. It teaches that charity adorns the hand, truth adorns the voice and the hearing of sacred wisdom adorns the ear — so that virtue, not jewellery, is a person's real beauty. The closing question dismisses external ornaments as needless.

Origin & Story

Niti Shataka of Bhartrhari (Subhashita) · Bhartrhari · Classical Sanskrit literature (c. 5th century CE)

Bhartrhari's Niti Shataka is a celebrated century of verses on worldly wisdom and right conduct. This shloka contrasts the gaudy ornaments people prize with the true ornaments of the soul — charity, truth and learning — concluding that one adorned with virtue has no need of jewels. It has long been quoted to teach that character is the highest beauty.

As told in scripture

It is said that those who wore these inner ornaments — a giving hand, a truthful tongue and an ear filled with wisdom — shone more brightly in the eyes of the world than any king bedecked in gold, proving the verse's claim that virtue is the only adornment that truly endures.

The Mantra

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hastasya bhūṣaṇaṁ dānaṁ satyaṁ kaṇṭhasya bhūṣaṇam। śrotrasya bhūṣaṇaṁ śāstraṁ bhūṣaṇaiḥ kiṁ prayojanam॥

Meaning:The ornament of the hand is charity; the ornament of the throat is truth; the ornament of the ear is the hearing of sacred learning — of what use, then, are mere jewelled ornaments? The verse declares that the true adornments of a person are virtues — generosity, truthfulness and wisdom — beside which external decorations are worthless.

Word-by-Word Meaning

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hastasya🔊of the hand
bhūṣaṇam🔊ornament, adornment
dānam🔊giving, charity
satyam🔊truth, truthfulness
kaṇṭhasya🔊of the throat (neck, voice)
bhūṣaṇam🔊ornament
śrotrasya🔊of the ear
bhūṣaṇam🔊ornament
śāstram🔊scripture, learning, sacred knowledge
bhūṣaṇaiḥ🔊with (jewelled) ornaments
kim🔊what (use), of what purpose
prayojanam🔊use, purpose, need

Benefits of Chanting हस्तस्य भूषणं दानम्

Redirects pride from external display toward inner virtue

Exalts charity, truthfulness and learning as the noblest adornments

Teaches that character, not ornaments, makes a person truly beautiful

A concise, elegant verse for reflection on values and self-worth

Inspires generous, honest and learned conduct in daily life

Frequently quoted to encourage virtue over vanity

How to Chant हस्तस्य भूषणं दानम्

Repetitions3times
Best TimeDuring reflection on values, while cultivating virtue, or when teaching the young

Recite the verse calmly, considering each true ornament in turn — the giving hand, the truthful voice and the ear attuned to wisdom. Let it shift your sense of worth away from outward show toward inner nobility. It is often shared to inspire generosity, honesty and the love of learning.

Frequently Asked Questions

This page shows the complete हस्तस्य भूषणं दानम् written in the English script — the same Sanskrit/Hindi verses, transliterated character-by-character so you can read and chant comfortably. Tap any line (or the ▶ button) to hear it recited aloud.
Yes — only the script changes; the words and their meaning are the original. The verse-by-verse meaning, benefits and how-to-chant guidance on this page apply exactly the same.
It means: 'Charity is the ornament of the hand, truth the ornament of the voice, and sacred learning the ornament of the ear — so what need is there of jewelled ornaments?' Virtue is a person's true adornment.
It teaches that the real beauty of a human being lies in virtues — generosity, truthfulness and wisdom — and that external ornaments are worthless by comparison.
It is a famous verse from the Niti Shataka of Bhartrhari, the great Sanskrit poet-sage, and is among the most quoted subhashitas on virtue and the true adornments of character.

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Read the full हस्तस्य भूषणं दानम् with verse-by-verse meaning, or explore more sacred texts