याति मज्जेदधौ पंके गोमये वा न जीवति । केशांगारैस्तथा भस्मभुजंगैर्निजलां नदीम्
yāti majjedadhau paṃke gomaye vā na jīvati | keśāṃgāraistathā bhasmabhujaṃgairnijalāṃ nadīm
Si en un sueño alguien va y se hunde en cuajada, en fango o en estiércol de vaca, no sobrevivirá. Asimismo, si contempla un río cuya agua no es agua verdadera—colmado de cabellos, brasas y serpientes hechas de ceniza—también es señal de muerte.
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta) addressing the sages (deduced from Māheśvarakhaṇḍa narration style)
Scene: A nightmare sequence: the dreamer sinks into curd, mire, or cow-dung; then beholds a river whose ‘water’ is hair, glowing embers, and ash-formed serpents—an anti-sacred river vision.
Dreams reflecting impurity, inversion of nature, and dread imagery are presented as warnings—encouraging vigilance, repentance, and renewed dharmic living.
No specific tīrtha is named in this verse; it belongs to a broader Purāṇic discussion of omens (ariṣṭa).
No explicit rite is prescribed here; the verse functions as a diagnostic omen-description rather than a vrata or dāna instruction.