Purusha-Strī-Lakṣaṇa (Samudrika-śāstra): Marks of Kingship, Wealth, Longevity, and Conduct
युगमीनाङ्कितनरो भवेत्सत्रप्रदो नरः / वज्राकाराश्च धनिनां मत्स्यपुच्छनिभा बुधे
yugamīnāṅkitanaro bhavetsatraprado naraḥ / vajrākārāśca dhanināṃ matsyapucchanibhā budhe
El hombre marcado con el signo de un par de peces llega a ser dador de caridades sacrificiales. Oh sabio, los ricos llevan señales con forma de vajra, el rayo, y otras que se asemejan a la cola de un pez.
Lord Vishnu
Concept: Auspicious bodily marks correlate with dāna and yajña-support (satra-prada) and with wealth; prosperity is framed as linked to merit and generosity.
Vedantic Theme: Wealth (artha) becomes dharmic when aligned with yajña/dāna; sattvic use of resources purifies and supports higher aims.
Application: Use prosperity for public good—support learning, food distribution, temples, healthcare; cultivate regular giving as a discipline that converts artha into puṇya.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.65: continuing mark-to-fruit correlations; references to dāna and auspicious signs in nearby verses.
This verse treats certain marks as karmic indicators—signs associated with generosity in ritual charity and with prosperity (wealth).
Indirectly: it links visible signs to past merit (puṇya), implying that dharmic actions like sacrificial giving shape one’s worldly status and future outcomes.
Focus on dharmic giving—supporting sacred rites, feeding others, and charitable donations—since the text emphasizes generosity as a mark of merit and prosperity.