HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 21Shloka 32
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Shloka 32

Matsya Purana — The Tale of Brahmadatta: Past-life Memory

हा वयं योगविभ्रष्टाः कामतः कर्मबन्धनाः एवं विलप्य बहुशस् त्रयस्ते योगपारगाः //

hā vayaṃ yogavibhraṣṭāḥ kāmataḥ karmabandhanāḥ evaṃ vilapya bahuśas trayaste yogapāragāḥ //

“Alas! We have fallen away from Yoga; through desire we have become bound by action (karma).” Thus lamenting again and again, those three—who had once crossed to the far shore of Yoga—(spoke).

हा (hā)alas
हा (hā):
वयम् (vayam)we
वयम् (vayam):
योग-विभ्रष्टाः (yoga-vibhraṣṭāḥ)fallen from yoga, deviated from yogic discipline
योग-विभ्रष्टाः (yoga-vibhraṣṭāḥ):
कामतः (kāmataḥ)due to desire, from lust/longing
कामतः (kāmataḥ):
कर्म-बन्धनाः (karma-bandhanāḥ)bound by karma, tied by the fetters of action and its results
कर्म-बन्धनाः (karma-bandhanāḥ):
एवम् (evam)thus
एवम् (evam):
विलप्य (vilapya)lamenting, wailing
विलप्य (vilapya):
बहुशः (bahuśaḥ)repeatedly, many times
बहुशः (bahuśaḥ):
त्रयः (trayaḥ)three
त्रयः (trayaḥ):
ते (te)those
ते (te):
योग-पारगाः (yoga-pāragāḥ)those who have gone beyond yoga, masters who reached yoga’s far shore
योग-पारगाः (yoga-pāragāḥ):
Narrator describing the speech of three yogins/sages (within the Matsya–Manu dialogue frame)
three yogins (trayaḥ yogapāragāḥ)karma (karman)kāma (desire)yoga
YogaKarmaKamaDetachmentDharma

FAQs

This verse is not about cosmic pralaya; it teaches an inner, ethical causality: desire (kāma) pulls one from yoga and creates karmic bondage, a “personal dissolution” of spiritual steadiness.

It warns that indulgence in desire produces binding consequences; for a king or householder, the implied duty is disciplined restraint, right intention, and action aligned with dharma so that karma does not become a fetter.

No Vāstu or ritual procedure is specified here; the takeaway is preparatory—purity of mind and control of desire are foundational for any effective rite, vrata, or temple-related observance taught elsewhere in the Matsya Purana.