आविवेश मुखे रात्रिः सुचिरस्फुटसंगमा जन्मदाया जगन्मातुः क्रमेण जठरान्तरे //
āviveśa mukhe rātriḥ sucirasphuṭasaṃgamā janmadāyā jaganmātuḥ krameṇa jaṭharāntare //
ଦୀର୍ଘ ଏବଂ ସ୍ପଷ୍ଟ ସଙ୍ଗମ ପରେ ରାତି ତାଙ୍କ ମୁଖରେ ପ୍ରବେଶ କଲା; ଏବଂ ଜଗନ୍ମାତା, ଜନ୍ମଦାତ୍ରୀ, ତାହାକୁ କ୍ରମେ ନିଜ ଗର୍ଭର ଅନ୍ତଃକକ୍ଷରେ ଧାରଣ କଲେ।
It depicts dissolution imagery: “Night” (a cosmic darkness) is re-absorbed, entering the “mouth” and then the “womb” of the World-Mother—suggesting the ordered withdrawal of manifested reality into a primordial matrix.
Indirectly, it frames worldly order as cyclical and perishable; in the Matsya Purana’s ethical arc, such pralaya-awareness supports dharma—urging kings and householders to govern and live with restraint, preparedness, and detachment from impermanent power and possessions.
No direct Vāstu or temple-rule instruction appears; the significance is symbolic-cosmological, often used ritually to contemplate re-absorption (laya) and the return of forms into the cosmic womb during night/dissolution meditations.