HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 150Shloka 44
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Shloka 44

Matsya Purana — War of Devas and Dānavas: Yama and Kubera Defeated; Kālanemi’s Māyā and the A...

ग्रसनः कटिवस्त्रैस्तु यमं गुह्य बलोद्धतः भ्रामयामास वेगेन प्रचित्तमिव सम्भ्रमः //

grasanaḥ kaṭivastraistu yamaṃ guhya baloddhataḥ bhrāmayāmāsa vegena pracittamiva sambhramaḥ //

Then Grāsana—his strength roused to fury—seized Yama by the waist-cloth at his loins and whirled him around with forceful speed, like confusion spinning a mind that has lost its steadiness.

ग्रसनःGrāsana (a named being, likely a fierce opponent)
ग्रसनः:
कटिवस्त्रैःby/with the waist-cloth (girding garment)
कटिवस्त्रैः:
तुthen/indeed
तु:
यमम्Yama (Lord of Death)
यमम्:
गुह्यat the hidden part/at the loins (guhya-region)
गुह्य:
बलोद्धतःhis strength aroused, intoxicated by power
बलोद्धतः:
भ्रामयामासcaused to whirl, spun around
भ्रामयामास:
वेगेनwith speed/impetus
वेगेन:
प्रचित्तम्a mind that is unsettled/deranged, unsteady in awareness
प्रचित्तम्:
इवlike/as if
इव:
सम्भ्रमःconfusion, agitation, bewilderment.
सम्भ्रमः:
Suta (or the Purana’s narrator) describing events in third-person narration (combat episode); exact speaker varies by recension, but the verse functions as narrative description rather than direct dialogue.
YamaGrāsana
Puranic battleYamaDaitya conflictMythic narrationPower and hubris

FAQs

This verse does not discuss Pralaya; it is a battlefield image emphasizing overpowering force and disorientation rather than cosmic dissolution.

Indirectly, it warns about baloddhata—being intoxicated by strength—suggesting that rulers and householders should restrain arrogance and govern the senses, since uncontrolled power leads to chaos and humiliation.

No Vastu Shastra or ritual procedure is stated here; the verse is purely narrative, using a psychological simile (confusion spinning the mind) to dramatize combat.