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Shloka 40

Matsya Purana — Brahmā’s Four Faces

तत् सर्वं नाशम् अगमत् स्वसुतोपगमेच्छया तेनोर्ध्वं वक्त्रम् अभवत् पञ्चमं तस्य धीमतः आविर्भवज्जटाभिश् च तद् वक्त्रं चावृणोत् प्रभुः //

tat sarvaṃ nāśam agamat svasutopagamecchayā tenordhvaṃ vaktram abhavat pañcamaṃ tasya dhīmataḥ āvirbhavajjaṭābhiś ca tad vaktraṃ cāvṛṇot prabhuḥ //

All of that came to ruin because of his desire to approach his own son. Then, above, a fifth face appeared upon that wise one; and the Lord, as matted locks suddenly manifested, covered that face.

tat sarvamall that
tat sarvam:
nāśam agamatwent to destruction/ruin
nāśam agamat:
sva-suta-upagama-icchayādue to the desire to approach/seek union with his own son
sva-suta-upagama-icchayā:
tenathereupon/therefore
tena:
ūrdhvamabove/upward
ūrdhvam:
vaktramface/mouth
vaktram:
abhavatarose/appeared
abhavat:
pañcamamthe fifth
pañcamam:
tasyaof him
tasya:
dhīmataḥof the wise one
dhīmataḥ:
āvirbhavatmanifested/appeared
āvirbhavat:
jaṭābhiḥwith matted locks (jaṭā)
jaṭābhiḥ:
caand
ca:
tat vaktramthat face
tat vaktram:
ca āvṛṇotalso covered/veiled
ca āvṛṇot:
prabhuḥthe Lord (a sovereign divine agent).
prabhuḥ:
Suta (narratorial voice) describing a theophanic consequence; doctrinally aligned with the Matsya Purana’s Vishnu-centric framing
Prabhu (Lord/Vishnu as supreme agent)Pañcavaktra (five-faced form motif)Jaṭā (matted locks, ascetic iconography)
PralayaTheophanyIconographyMoral causalityPuranic narrative

FAQs

It frames destruction as a consequence of adharma-like transgression and shows divine intervention shaping events, a typical Purāṇic way of linking cosmic disorder with moral disorder.

By portraying ruin arising from an improper desire, it reinforces the ethical ideal of self-restraint (dama) and adherence to dharma—core expectations for both rulers and householders in Purāṇic instruction.

No direct Vāstu or ritual procedure is stated; the verse is primarily iconographic and symbolic, using motifs like a ‘fifth face’ and ‘jaṭā’ that later inform deity-form descriptions (pratimā-lakṣaṇa) in Purāṇic traditions.