Adhyaya 2 — The Lineage of Garuda and the Birth of the Wise Birds: Kanka and Kandhara
भिन्ने कोष्ठे शशाङ्काभं भूमावण्डचतुष्टयम् ।
आयुषः सावशेषत्वात् तूलराशाविवापतत् ॥
bhinne koṣṭhe śaśāṅkābhaṃ bhūmāv aṇḍacatuṣṭayam /
āyuṣaḥ sāvaśeṣatvāt tūlarāśāv ivāpatat
ভঁৰালঘৰ ভাঙি যেতিয়া খোল খাই গ’ল, তেতিয়া চন্দ্ৰৰ দৰে শুভ্ৰ ডিম্বসদৃশ চাৰিটা বস্তু—কপাহৰ ঢেঁকীৰ দৰে—ভূমিত পৰিল; কাৰণ আয়ুৰ অল্প অংশহে শেষ আছিল।
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The verse uses a stark omen—objects falling out when a storehouse is breached—to underscore āyuḥ (lifespan) as a measurable, exhaustible allotment. The ethical pressure is toward vigilance: one should not presume continuity, but act dharmically while time remains.
This verse is not directly sarga/pratisarga/vaṃśa/manvantara/vaṃśānucarita in itself; it functions as narrative texture within vaṃśānucarita-style storytelling (episodes illustrating human fate and the consequences/portents around life and death).
The ‘four moon-white eggs’ can be read symbolically as subtle “seeds” of embodied experience (aṇḍa as germ/seed), and their falling when the ‘koṣṭha’ breaks suggests the collapse of the body-container at life’s end. The cotton-heap simile emphasizes lightness/dispersion—life’s elements scatter when the binding term (āyuḥ) is nearly spent.