An exposition on the fruits of charity and on entry into a body
Garbhotpatti, Piṇḍa-śarīra, and Antya-kāla-kriyā
चतुर्दशे भवेन्मांसं मिश्रधातुसमन्वितम् / घनं मांसञ्च विंशाहे गर्भस्थो वर्धते क्रमात्
caturdaśe bhavenmāṃsaṃ miśradhātusamanvitam / ghanaṃ māṃsañca viṃśāhe garbhastho vardhate kramāt
Am vierzehnten Tag entsteht Fleisch, versehen mit einer Mischung der leiblichen Bestandteile; und am zwanzigsten Tag wird dieses Fleisch fest und dicht. So wächst der Embryo im Mutterleib allmählich, Stufe um Stufe.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: The body forms through sequential consolidation: mamsa arises and becomes ghana (dense) as mixed constituents integrate.
Vedantic Theme: Name-and-form (nāma-rūpa) crystallize progressively; the embodied condition is constructed and therefore non-ultimate.
Application: Use contemplation of bodily construction to reduce pride in form and cultivate equanimity toward aging and change.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: bodily-inner-space
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.32.23–27 (continuous fetal development sequence)
This verse emphasizes that bodily formation is sequential and governed by natural order (krama), supporting the Purana’s broader teaching that embodied life arises through lawful processes and is therefore ethically significant.
It states that by the 14th day flesh (māṁsa) appears with mixed bodily constituents (dhātus), and by the 20th day it becomes dense, indicating a gradual consolidation of the embryo’s physical structure.
It encourages reverence for embodied life and mindful conduct, reminding practitioners that the human body develops through a delicate, step-by-step process and should be protected through dharmic living.