Tāmasa Sarga, the Androgynous Division of Brahmā, and the Lineages of Dharma and Adharma
दुः खोत्तराः स्मृता ह्येते सर्वे चाधर्मलक्षणाः / नैषां भार्यास्ति पुत्रो वा सर्वे ते ह्यूर्ध्वरेतसः
duḥ khottarāḥ smṛtā hyete sarve cādharmalakṣaṇāḥ / naiṣāṃ bhāryāsti putro vā sarve te hyūrdhvaretasaḥ
આ બધા દુઃખમાં અંત પામનારા અને અધર્મના લક્ષણવાળા ગણાય છે. એમને ન પત્ની છે ન પુત્ર; એ બધા ઊર્ધ્વરેતસ છે.
Suta (narrator) recounting the teaching within the Kurma Purana’s dharma discourse
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Indirectly: it frames adharma as a cause of duḥkha, implying that liberation-oriented life must align conduct with dharma so the mind becomes fit for Self-knowledge rather than bondage-producing action.
The verse points to an ascetic orientation—ūrdhvaretas—often associated with brahmacarya and the sublimation of vital energy, a prerequisite in many Yoga-shastra and Pashupata-leaning disciplines for steadiness and inner purity.
Not explicitly; it contributes to the Kurma Purana’s shared Shaiva–Vaishnava ethic by grounding higher practice (including Pashupata-style restraint) in dharma and warning that adharma culminates in suffering.