अहिंसा-प्रधान धर्मविचारः
Ahiṃsā as the Superior Dharma: Practical and Scriptural Reasoning
सा वै तदा मृत्युसंज्ञापदेशा भीता शापाद् बाढमित्यब्रवीत् तम् । अथो प्राणान् प्राणिनामन्तकाले कामक्रोधौ प्राप्य निर्मोह्म हन्ति
sā vai tadā mṛtyu-saṃjñā-padeśā bhītā śāpād bāḍham ity abravīt tam | atho prāṇān prāṇinām anta-kāle kāma-krodhau prāpya nirmoham hanti ||
Maka ketika itu dia—yang ditetapkan dan dinamai “Maut”—kerana takut akan sumpahan, berkata kepada Brahmā: “Baiklah; aku menerima perintahmu.” Selepas itu, apabila tiba saat akhir makhluk-makhluk bernyawa, Maut mendekat dengan membangkitkan kāma dan krodha; dan melalui kedua-duanya, ia menewaskan makhluk, mencampakkan mereka ke dalam delusi, lalu mematikan mereka.
पितामह उवाच
The verse links the moment of death with inner forces—desire (kāma) and anger (krodha)—showing how ethical and psychological disturbances can cloud discernment (moha). It implies that self-mastery over these impulses is central to dharma and to meeting life’s end with clarity rather than delusion.
Death, personified as a woman appointed to the role, accepts the command given to her (in the surrounding story, by Brahmā) and, at the destined end-time of beings, brings about their death by activating desire and anger, which then overwhelm them with delusion.