Purusha-Strī-Lakṣaṇa (Samudrika-śāstra): Marks of Kingship, Wealth, Longevity, and Conduct
दक्षिणावर्तचलितमूत्रा भिश्च नृपाः स्मृताः / विकीर्णमूत्रा निः स्वाश्च प्रधानसुखदायिकाः
dakṣiṇāvartacalitamūtrā bhiśca nṛpāḥ smṛtāḥ / vikīrṇamūtrā niḥ svāśca pradhānasukhadāyikāḥ
Als Könige gelten, so heißt es, jene, deren Urin in einem rechtsläufigen Verlauf fließt; wer hingegen zerstreut uriniert, wird als mittellos bezeichnet. Diese Zeichen gelten als hauptsächliche Hinweise, die Glück und Gedeihen anzeigen—und verleihen.
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda)
Concept: Subtle bodily patterns are read as karmic indicators of sovereignty or poverty; prosperity is framed as signaled by embodied order vs dispersion.
Vedantic Theme: Order (niyati) in prārabdha expresses as bodily regularity; yet ultimate worth is not reducible to bodily marks.
Application: Use the teaching as a reminder to cultivate orderliness and health; avoid judging others by bodily signs; focus on ethical means of prosperity.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.65 (lakṣaṇa-based status indicators)
This verse treats certain involuntary bodily patterns as traditional indicators of one’s worldly station—such as rulership or poverty—showing that the text also preserves omen-lore alongside dharma teachings.
It does not directly describe the soul’s post-death journey; instead, it focuses on in-life indicators of fortune and status, which in the broader Purana are often linked to prior karma.
Read it as a cultural record of traditional physiognomy/omen interpretation; for ethical living, prioritize dharma and karma over omens when making decisions.