Adhyaya 43 — Portents of Death (Ariṣṭa-lakṣaṇas) and the Yogin’s Response; Alarka Renounces Kingship
सूर्योदये यस्य शिवा क्रोशन्ती याति संमुखम् ।
विपरीतं परीतं वा स सद्यो मृत्युमृच्छति ॥
sūryodaye yasya śivā krośantī yāti saṃmukham / viparītaṃ parītaṃ vā sa sadyo mṛtyumṛcchati
日の出の時、豺(śivā)が吠え叫びつつ人に向かって来るなら—逆の方角からであれ、周囲を巡りつつであれ—その人は直ちに死に至る。
{ "primaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Nature is read as a moral mirror in Purāṇic culture; ominous encounters prompt restraint, prayer, and urgent completion of righteous duties.
Ancillary dharma/śakuna material; not one of the five principal Purāṇic characteristics.
Sunrise marks the day’s prāṇic ‘opening’; an inauspicious śakuna at that liminal time symbolizes obstruction of life-force and the closing of one’s allotted time.