Chapter 370: नरकनिरूपणम्
Naraka-nirūpaṇa) — Description of Hell (with the physiology of dying and the subtle transition
मार्जारोलूकगोमायुगृघ्रादिवदनाश् च ते तैलद्रोण्यां नरं क्षिप्त्वा ज्वालयन्ति हुताशनं
mārjārolūkagomāyugṛghrādivadanāś ca te tailadroṇyāṃ naraṃ kṣiptvā jvālayanti hutāśanaṃ
आणि ते (यातनादाते)—ज्यांची तोंडे मांजर, घुबड, कोल्हा, गिधाड इत्यादींसारखी आहेत—मनुष्याला तेलाच्या द्रोणीत टाकून मग भक्षक अग्नी प्रज्वलित करतात।
Lord Agni (narrating puranic dharma and post-death consequences, traditionally to Vasiṣṭha)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Dharmashastra","secondary_vidya":"Cosmology","practical_application":"Vivid punitive imagery used to discourage cruelty and adharma; supports teaching on consequences and the role of yamadūtas.","sutra_style":false}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Description","entry_title":"Taila-droṇī-daṇḍa (Oil-trough torment by beast-faced tormentors)","lookup_keywords":["taila-droṇī","hutāśana","yamadūta","mārjāra-vadana","ulūka-gomāyu-gṛdhra"],"quick_summary":"Depicts a specific hell-torture: beast-faced tormentors cast the sinner into an oil trough and ignite fire—an emblem of intense, inescapable suffering tied to pāpa."}
Alamkara Type: Rūpaka
Concept: Adharma leads to experiential suffering; the grotesque forms externalize inner moral distortion.
Application: Cultivate ahiṃsā, satya, and restraint; avoid acts that ‘burn’ others (cruelty, exploitation), framed as leading to burning retribution.
Khanda Section: Naraka-varnana / Preta-yonis and punitive hell-descriptions (Dharma–Adharma consequences)
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A hell-chamber where beast-faced tormentors (cat, owl, jackal, vulture visages) seize a man, throw him into a large trough of oil, and ignite flames around it; smoke, heat, and terror dominate the scene.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural: dramatic underworld scene with stylized beast-faced yamadūtas, a large oil trough, curling flames and smoke; bold outlines, flat planes of red/orange fire, dark green-black background, ornamental border.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting: central oil trough with gold-highlighted rim, intense flames rendered with red and gold, grotesque but stylized beast-faced tormentors, embossed detailing, deep maroon backdrop.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting: clear narrative composition showing the sequence—casting into oil trough and kindling fire—fine linework, controlled flames, captions for ‘taila-droṇī’ and ‘hutāśana’.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature: architectural hell interior with a large trough, attendants with animal heads in detailed costume, realistic flame and smoke effects, expressive human figure, intricate textures and shading."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"intense","suggested_raga":"Bhairav","pace":"fast","voice_tone":"epic"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: मार्जारोलूकगोमायुगृघ्रादिवदनाश् च = ...वदनाः + च (visarga before ca).
Related Themes: Agni Purana: Naraka-varṇana (370.20–370.23)
This verse conveys dharma-śāstric karmic doctrine rather than a ritual: it describes a specific infernal punishment (being cast into an oil-trough and burned) administered by terrifying, animal-faced tormentors.
By cataloging post-death outcomes and punishments, the Agni Purana functions as a compendium of moral theology and cosmology alongside its many other subjects—mapping ethical causality (karma) into concrete, narrative descriptions of Naraka.
It underscores that adharma produces tangible consequences after death; fearsome Naraka imagery is used to reinforce restraint, repentance, and adherence to dharma as a means to avoid such karmic retribution.