HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 70Shloka 5
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Shloka 5

Matsya Purana — Code of Conduct and Vow-Procedure for Courtesans

गच्छन्समीपमार्गेण साम्बः परपुरंजयः साक्षात्कन्दर्पो रूपेण सर्वाभरणभूषितः //

gacchansamīpamārgeṇa sāmbaḥ parapuraṃjayaḥ sākṣātkandarpo rūpeṇa sarvābharaṇabhūṣitaḥ //

Proceeding by the nearby path, Sāmba—conqueror of enemy cities—appeared in form like Kandarpa (Kāma) himself, adorned with every kind of ornament.

गच्छन् (gacchan)going, proceeding
गच्छन् (gacchan):
समीप-मार्गेण (samīpa-mārgeṇa)by the nearby/adjacent path
समीप-मार्गेण (samīpa-mārgeṇa):
साम्बः (sāmbaḥ)Sāmba (a proper name)
साम्बः (sāmbaḥ):
पर-पुरं-जयः (para-puraṃ-jayaḥ)conqueror of others’ cities/foes’ strongholds
पर-पुरं-जयः (para-puraṃ-jayaḥ):
साक्षात् (sākṣāt)directly, as if in person
साक्षात् (sākṣāt):
कन्दर्पः (kandarpaḥ)Kandarpa, Kāma (god of love)
कन्दर्पः (kandarpaḥ):
रूपेण (rūpeṇa)in form/appearance
रूपेण (rūpeṇa):
सर्व-आभरण-भूषितः (sarvābharaṇa-bhūṣitaḥ)adorned with all ornaments.
सर्व-आभरण-भूषितः (sarvābharaṇa-bhūṣitaḥ):
Sūta (narrator), continuing the Matsya Purana’s narrative to the sages
SāmbaKandarpa (Kāma)
Puranic narrativeRoyal valorBeauty and ornamentationGenealogy episodeCharacter description

FAQs

This verse does not discuss Pralaya; it is a narrative description highlighting Sāmba’s extraordinary beauty and splendor, comparing him to Kāma.

Indirectly, it frames Sāmba as a heroic “conqueror of enemy cities,” reflecting the kṣatriya ideal of valor and public stature, while also emphasizing royal decorum through dignified adornment.

No explicit Vāstu or ritual procedure is stated; the closest technical element is the motif of “all ornaments,” useful for iconographic/royal-portrait conventions rather than temple-building rules.