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Shloka 49

Matsya Purana — Manvantaras

पञ्चात्मके यो विषये कारणे चाष्टलक्षणे न क्रुध्येत प्रतिहतः स जितात्मा भविष्यति //

pañcātmake yo viṣaye kāraṇe cāṣṭalakṣaṇe na krudhyeta pratihataḥ sa jitātmā bhaviṣyati //

He who, even when restrained or opposed, does not grow angry with regard to the fivefold objects of sense and the cause endowed with eight characteristics—he shall become a conqueror of himself (jitātmā).

pañcātmakein the fivefold (i.e., connected with the five sense-objects)
pañcātmake:
yowho
yo:
viṣayewith respect to objects/field of experience
viṣaye:
kāraṇein the cause/source (prakṛti or causal basis)
kāraṇe:
caand
ca:
aṣṭa-lakṣaṇepossessing eight characteristics/marks
aṣṭa-lakṣaṇe:
nanot
na:
krudhyetshould become angry
krudhyet:
pratihataḥwhen obstructed/repelled/checked
pratihataḥ:
sahe
sa:
jitātmāself-controlled, one who has conquered the mind/self
jitātmā:
bhaviṣyatiwill become/will be.
bhaviṣyati:
Lord Matsya (teaching Vaivasvata Manu)
MatsyaVaivasvata Manu
DharmaSelf-controlAnger managementSankhya termsEthics

FAQs

This verse is not a pralaya narrative; it uses Sāṅkhya-style categories (fivefold sense-objects and an eight-characterized cause) to define inner discipline—showing that mastery of anger is foundational for dharmic life regardless of cosmic cycles.

For a king or householder, being “pratihataḥ” (opposed, insulted, obstructed) is common; the verse teaches that not reacting with anger—especially amid sensory provocations—marks true self-mastery, supporting just rule, restraint, and stable governance.

No direct Vastu or ritual procedure appears here; the practical takeaway is ethical: self-control and freedom from anger are inner qualifications that the Matsya Purana often treats as prerequisites for successful rites, vows, and dharmic conduct.