Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 65

Adhyaya 10Jaimini’s Questions on Birth, Death, Karma, and the Embodied Journey

कुश-कण्टक-वलमीक-शङ्कु-पाषाणकर्कशे ।

तथा प्रदीप्तज्वलने क्वचिच्छृभ्रशतोत्कटे ॥

kuśa-kaṇṭaka-valamīka-śaṅku-pāṣāṇakarkaśe /

tathā pradīptajvalane kvacic chṛbhraśatotkaṭe

കുശപ്പുല്ലിന്റെ മുള്ളുകൾ, വല്മീകങ്ങൾ, കുത്തുകമ്പുകൾ, കല്ലുകൾ എന്നിവകൊണ്ട് കരടായ കഠിന വഴിയിൽ—എവിടെയോ ജ്വലിക്കുന്ന അഗ്നിസ്ഥലങ്ങളിൽ, മറ്റെവിടെയോ നൂറുകണക്കിന് മൂർച്ചയുള്ള അഗ്രങ്ങൾ കൊണ്ട് ഭീകരമായ സ്ഥലങ്ങളിൽ—

कुशकण्टकवलमीकशङ्कुपाषाणकर्कशेin/at a place harsh with kuśa, thorns, ant-hills, spikes, stones
कुशकण्टकवलमीकशङ्कुपाषाणकर्कशे:
Adhikarana (अधिकरण)
TypeAdjective
Rootकुश + कण्टक + वलमीक + शङ्कु + पाषाण + कर्कश (प्रातिपदिक)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्ग (n.)/पुंलिङ्ग (m.) (contextual), सप्तमी-विभक्ति (Loc. 7), एकवचन (sg.); समासः—बहुपद-तत्पुरुष (determinative: 'harsh with kuśa-grass, thorns, ant-hills, spikes, stones')
तथाlikewise, also
तथा:
Samuccaya/Prakara (समुच्चय/प्रकार)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootतथा (अव्यय)
Formअव्यय (adverb: likewise/also)
प्रदीप्तज्वलनेin blazing fire
प्रदीप्तज्वलने:
Adhikarana (अधिकरण)
TypeNoun
Rootप्रदीप्त + ज्वलन (प्रातिपदिक)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्ग (n.), सप्तमी-विभक्ति (Loc. 7), एकवचन (sg.); कर्मधारय-समास ('blazing fire')
क्वचित्somewhere, in some place
क्वचित्:
Desha-adhikarana (देश-अधिकरण)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootक्वचित् (अव्यय)
Formअव्यय (adverb: somewhere/at times)
शृभ्रशतोत्कटेin a very fierce (place) with hundreds of śṛbhra
शृभ्रशतोत्कटे:
Adhikarana (अधिकरण)
TypeAdjective
Rootशृभ्र + शत + उत्कट (प्रातिपदिक)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्ग (n.)/पुंलिङ्ग (m.) (contextual), सप्तमी-विभक्ति (Loc. 7), एकवचन (sg.); समासः—तत्पुरुष (determinative: 'very fierce with hundreds of śṛbhra (sharp/rough objects; reading-dependent)')
Frame-dialogue context not explicit in the provided excerpt (likely an instructive narration within Adhyaya 10)

{ "primaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "secondaryRasa": "bibhatsa", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

Afterlife journeyConsequences of sinYātanā imagery

FAQs

The harsh landscape externalizes inner moral disorder: harmful actions yield painful passages, encouraging non-violence, charity, and disciplined conduct.

Ethical instruction via karmaphala narrative; not part of creation/manvantara/dynasty frameworks.

The ‘spiked, burning path’ can be read as a purgative corridor where latent karmic impressions are forced into experience—an allegory for the mind encountering its own accumulated afflictions.