Viṣa-hara Yogas: Puṣya-Nakṣatra Remedies for Serpents, Stings, and Compounded Poisons
घृतं कुमारीपत्रं वै दत्तं सलवणं हर / तुरङ्गमशरीराणां कण्डूर्नश्येद्दशाहतः
ghṛtaṃ kumārīpatraṃ vai dattaṃ salavaṇaṃ hara / turaṅgamaśarīrāṇāṃ kaṇḍūrnaśyeddaśāhataḥ
ໂອ ຮະຣະ (ພຣະສິວະ), ເມື່ອນຳນ້ຳມັນເນີຍ (ghee) ປົນກັບໃບກຸມາຣີ (aloe) ແລະເກືອ ໄປທາ, ອາການຄັນໃນຮ່າງກາຍຂອງມ້າຈະຫາຍໄປພາຍໃນສິບວັນ.
Lord Vishnu (narrative voice within the Vishnu–Garuda dialogue; verse addresses Hara as an invoked authority)
Concept: Responsible stewardship: tending dependents (including animals) with timely, appropriate remedies.
Vedantic Theme: Ahimsā and caretaking as sattvic conduct; service (sevā) supports inner purity.
Application: Apply ghee mixed with kumārī (aloe) leaf and salt to relieve equine itching; continue up to ten days (traditional regimen).
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.191 (remedial formulations; includes non-human treatment)
It shows the Purana’s practical, applied knowledge—using simple substances (ghee, kumārī, salt) as a prescribed cure, here specifically for equine itching.
This verse does not directly discuss afterlife doctrine; it belongs to the Purana’s applied instruction sections, indicating that Garuda Purana also preserves worldly remedies alongside spiritual teachings.
As a traditional reference, it highlights a topical formulation concept (emollient + herbal + salt). For modern use—especially on animals—apply only with qualified veterinary guidance.