Adhyaya 48 — The Emanation of Beings from Brahma: Night, Day, Twilight, and the Orders of Creation
गौरजः पुरुषो मेषो अश्वाश्वतरगर्दभाः ।
एतान् ग्राम्यान् पशूनाहुरारण्यांश्च निबोध मे ॥
gaurajaḥ puruṣo meṣo aśvāśvataragardabhāḥ | etān grāmyān paśūn āhur āraṇyāṃś ca nibodha me ||
गाय, शेळी, मनुष्य, मेंढा, घोडा, खच्चर आणि गाढव—हे पाळीव (ग्राम्य) पशू सांगितले आहेत. आता माझ्याकडून वन्य पशूही जाणून घे.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
By listing ‘puruṣa’ among paśus, the text underscores embodied continuity across species and invites humility; ‘domestic’ implies ethical obligations of care and regulated use.
Sarga: ordering and classifying created beings is part of the descriptive cosmology typical of Purāṇas.
Grāmya/āraṇya can be read as tamed vs untamed impulses; the human is ‘domesticable’ through dharma, while the ‘forest’ signifies unintegrated instincts.