Yama’s Journey to Brahmaloka
Ekadashi–Dvadashi Mahatmya in the Rukmangada Cycle
शून्ये त्रिविष्टपे जाते शून्ये च नरके तथा । नारदो धर्मराजानं गत्वा चेदमुवाच ह ॥ २३ ॥
śūnye triviṣṭape jāte śūnye ca narake tathā | nārado dharmarājānaṃ gatvā cedamuvāca ha || 23 ||
त्रिविष्टप स्वर्ग रिकामा झाला आणि तसेच नरकही रिकामे झाले, तेव्हा नारद धर्मराज यमांकडे जाऊन हे वचन बोलले।
Suta (narrator), introducing Narada’s action
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
It signals an extraordinary imbalance in the cosmic moral order—when both Svarga and Naraka stand empty—prompting Nārada to consult Dharmarāja, the divine administrator of karmic justice.
Indirectly, it frames a discussion about the fate of souls and the functioning of karmic results; in Purāṇic context, such disruptions often lead to teachings on superior paths like Viṣṇu-bhakti that can transcend ordinary merit-and-sin accounting.
No specific Vedāṅga (like Vyākaraṇa or Jyotiṣa) is taught in this verse; it is primarily narrative, setting up a dharma-karmaphala discussion overseen by Yama.