Adhyaya 12 — The Son Describes the Narakas: Mahāraurava, Tamas, Nikṛntana, Apratiṣṭha, Asipatravana, and Taptakumbha
द्रवीभूतैः शिरोगात्र-स्नायु-मांस-त्वगस्थिभिः ।
ततो याम्यैर्नरैराशु दर्व्या घट्टनघट्टिताः ॥
dravībhūtaiḥ śirogātra-snāyu-māṃsa-tvag-asthibhiḥ / tato yāmyair narair āśu darvyā ghaṭṭanaghaṭṭitāḥ
เมื่อศีรษะ ร่างกาย เส้นเอ็น เนื้อ หนัง และกระดูกหลอมละลาย บริวารของพระยมก็รีบกวนและขูดพวกเขาด้วยทัพพี
{ "primaryRasa": "bibhatsa", "secondaryRasa": "raudra", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The ‘churning’ underscores that consequences are not random but ‘processed’—i.e., karma is worked out until exhausted, encouraging ethical living as preventative wisdom.
Non-lakṣaṇa didactic section aimed at dharma and vairāgya (dispassion) through fearsome exempla.
Churning is a symbolic inversion of sacred churning (samudra-manthana): instead of producing nectar, harmful karma yields suffering; a warning against misusing human agency.