अस्थिपट्टतुलास्तंभस्नायुबंधेन यंत्रितम् । रक्तमांसमृदालिप्तं विण्मूत्रद्रव्यभाजनम्
asthipaṭṭatulāstaṃbhasnāyubaṃdhena yaṃtritam | raktamāṃsamṛdāliptaṃ viṇmūtradravyabhājanam
この身は腱に縛られた仕掛けであり、骨は板や柱のごとく、血と肉の泥に塗れ、糞尿という不浄の物質を収める器である。
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa) to the sages (deduced from Māheśvarakhaṇḍa narrative style)
Listener: dvija (addressed)
Scene: A yogin-teacher instructs a brāhmaṇa disciple; the human body is allegorized as a crude wooden-and-bone contraption, smeared with flesh and blood, emphasizing impermanence and impurity.
Seeing the body’s constructed and impure nature supports detachment and a turn toward liberation.
No tīrtha is mentioned; the verse is a contemplative critique of bodily attachment.
None; it functions as a meditation for dispassion (vairāgya).