An exposition on the fruits of charity and on entry into a body
Garbhotpatti, Piṇḍa-śarīra, and Antya-kāla-kriyā
रक्तं पलशतं तार्क्ष्यं बुद्धमेव पुरातनैः / पलानि दश मेदश्च त्वचा चैव तु तत्समा
raktaṃ palaśataṃ tārkṣyaṃ buddhameva purātanaiḥ / palāni daśa medaśca tvacā caiva tu tatsamā
ഹേ താർക്ഷ്യ (ഗരുഡാ), പുരാതനർ രക്തത്തിന്റെ അളവ് നൂറ് പലം എന്നു പറഞ്ഞു. മേദസ് പത്ത് പലം; ത്വക്കും അതേ അളവാണ്.
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda/Tārkṣya)
Concept: Dhātu-parimāṇa (quantification of blood, fat, skin) as knowledge of embodied constitution.
Vedantic Theme: Anātma-viveka support: what is quantified and changeable is not the Self; body as upādhi.
Application: Contemplate bodily materials to temper attachment to appearance and sensuality; cultivate cleanliness and moderation knowing the body’s material basis.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.32.53, 2.32.55-57 (same anatomical series; karma conclusion)
This verse frames the body as a measurable, perishable aggregate—supporting the Preta Kanda’s focus on what departs at death and why rites address the departed (preta) rather than the decaying physical elements.
By emphasizing the body’s material composition, it reinforces the ritual logic that post-death observances (like śrāddha and piṇḍa-dāna) are meant to aid the subtle journey, not preserve the physical body.
Cultivate detachment and ethical living: remembering the body’s impermanence helps prioritize dharma, compassion, and timely performance of family duties such as last rites.