Kāraṇānvēṣaṇam: The 32 Marks of Hari, Defects (Doṣas), Death-Omens, and Hari’s Omnipresence in Social & Household Life
समुन्नतं शिश्रमथो हि लक्ष्म यस्यास्ति तत् पञ्चदशं वदन्ति / सुताम्रकं पादतलं खगेन्द्र तल्लक्षणं षोडशं प्राहुरार्याः
samunnataṃ śiśramatho hi lakṣma yasyāsti tat pañcadaśaṃ vadanti / sutāmrakaṃ pādatalaṃ khagendra tallakṣaṇaṃ ṣoḍaśaṃ prāhurāryāḥ
El decimoquinto signo auspicioso, dicen, es que el órgano viril esté bien elevado y bien formado. Y, oh Señor de las Aves (Garuda), el decimosexto signo del que hablan los nobles es que las plantas de los pies sean suavemente rojizas, como de cobre.
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda)
Concept: Auspicious bodily signs culminate in the sanctity of the feet—suggesting reverence for pāda-sevā and the devotional focus on the Lord’s feet as refuge.
Vedantic Theme: Śaraṇāgati motif: the ‘feet’ as symbol of ultimate refuge; external marks point inward to surrender and grace.
Application: Cultivate humility and service (sevā); in devotion, meditate on the Lord’s feet and practice respectful conduct toward teachers/elders.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.22 (marks 15–16; address to Khagendra)
In this chapter, lakṣaṇas are presented as traditional indicators of fortune and dharmic prosperity; this verse lists two such auspicious signs—well-formed generative organ and coppery-red soles.
Here the text shifts from afterlife themes to dharmic indicators in embodied life, describing classical “marks” that the learned regard as signs of auspicious destiny.
Treat it as a cultural-ethical reminder: cultivate dharma and health rather than obsessing over omens—use such passages to understand tradition, not to judge others.