Graha–Ketu–Utpāta Lakṣaṇas: Solar/Lunar Omens, Comets, Eclipses, and Calendar Rules
क्षुच्छस्त्रानलचौरेभ्यो भयदः प्राणिनां तदा । याम्याग्निधातृवायव्यधिष्ण्येषु प्राकृता गतिः ॥ ४४ ॥
kṣucchastrānalacaurebhyo bhayadaḥ prāṇināṃ tadā | yāmyāgnidhātṛvāyavyadhiṣṇyeṣu prākṛtā gatiḥ || 44 ||
その時、衆生にとって彼は飢え・武器・火災・盗賊からの恐れを与える者となり、また世俗の常の流れは、ヤマ・アグニ・ダートリ・ヴァーユの司る住処へと向かう。
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It warns that a purely worldly, instinct-driven life (prākṛtā gatiḥ) results in fear and constrained destinies under cosmic regulators like Yama and other deities, pointing the seeker toward a higher liberating path.
By highlighting the insecurity of material existence—fear from hunger, violence, fire, and theft—it implicitly motivates refuge in a higher dharma; in Moksha Dharma contexts, this culminates in turning to devotion and surrender that transcends such fear-bound outcomes.
The verse reflects dharma-śāstric and cosmological mapping of “gati” (destinations) and deity jurisdictions; it is more about karmic consequence and loka-structure than a specific Vedanga technique like Vyākaraṇa or Jyotiṣa.