Chanda and Munda Discover Katyayani; Mahishasura’s Proposal and the Vishnu-Panjara Protection
प्रागेव पुंसस्तु शुभाशुभानि स्थाने विधात्रा प्रतिपादितानि यस्मिन् यथायानि यतो ऽथविप्र स नीयते वा व्रजति स्वयं वा
prāgeva puṃsastu śubhāśubhāni sthāne vidhātrā pratipāditāni yasmin yathāyāni yato 'thavipra sa nīyate vā vrajati svayaṃ vā
মানুহৰ শুভ-অশুভ ফল বিধাতাই আগতেই নিজ নিজ স্থানত নিৰ্ধাৰণ কৰি থৈছে। সেয়ে, হে বিপ্ৰ, য’ত যিদৰে সেয়া ঘটিবলগীয়া, মানুহক তাত লৈ যোৱা হয়—নচেৎ সি নিজেই তাত যায়।
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The verse teaches that outcomes (pleasant or painful) manifest according to an ordained moral order; even when one ‘chooses’ to go somewhere, that choice often aligns with deeper karmic momentum—hence humility and responsibility are both implied.
It functions as dharma/karma-interpretive narration within Vaṃśānucarita/Carita storytelling—an explanatory maxim (nyāya-style) embedded in the historical/legendary account.
‘Being led’ versus ‘going oneself’ collapses the dichotomy between fate and free will: providence operates both externally (circumstance) and internally (impulse), preparing the reader to interpret the asura’s next actions as karmically compelled.