HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 30Shloka 23
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Shloka 23

Matsya Purana — Devayānī Meets Yayāti: Courtship

*ययातिरुवाच क्रुद्धादाशीविषात् सर्पाज् ज्वलनात्सर्वतोमुखात् दुराधर्षतरो विप्रः पुरुषेण विजानता //

*yayātiruvāca kruddhādāśīviṣāt sarpāj jvalanātsarvatomukhāt durādharṣataro vipraḥ puruṣeṇa vijānatā //

Yayāti said: “For a discerning person, a wrathful brāhmaṇa is even harder to withstand than a venomous serpent or an all-devouring fire blazing on every side.”

ययातिः उवाचYayāti said
ययातिः उवाच:
क्रुद्धात्than one who is angry/wrathful
क्रुद्धात्:
आशीविषात्than a highly venomous snake
आशीविषात्:
सर्पात्than a serpent
सर्पात्:
ज्वलनात्than fire/flame
ज्वलनात्:
सर्वतोमुखात्having mouths on all sides (all-devouring, surrounding)
सर्वतोमुखात्:
दुराधर्षतरःmore difficult to resist/overpower
दुराधर्षतरः:
विप्रःa brāhmaṇa, learned priest/sage
विप्रः:
पुरुषेणby a man/person
पुरुषेण:
विजानताwho knows, who is discerning/wise.
विजानता:
King Yayāti
YayātiVipra (Brāhmaṇa)
DynastiesDharmaRoyal EthicsSpeech EthicsBrāhmaṇa

FAQs

This verse is not about pralaya; it is an ethical warning within a royal-dynastic narrative, stressing that social-spiritual power (a wrathful brāhmaṇa’s curse) can be more perilous than physical dangers.

It advises restraint and reverence: a king (and householder) should avoid provoking learned brāhmaṇas, govern with humility, and maintain disciplined speech and conduct to prevent ruin caused by anger and its consequences.

No Vāstu or temple-building rule is stated here; the ritual takeaway is indirect—honoring brāhmaṇas and maintaining respectful conduct supports yajña (sacrificial) order and social harmony central to Purāṇic dharma.