Purusha-Strī-Lakṣaṇa (Samudrika-śāstra): Marks of Kingship, Wealth, Longevity, and Conduct
छिन्नाग्रकूपनासः स्यादगम्यागमने रतः / दीर्घनासे च सौभाग्यं चौरश्चाकुञ्चितेन्द्रियः
chinnāgrakūpanāsaḥ syādagamyāgamane rataḥ / dīrghanāse ca saubhāgyaṃ cauraścākuñcitendriyaḥ
Ang may putol na dulo ng ilong o may hukay-hukay ang ilong ay sinasabing nahihilig sa bawal na pakikipagtalik. Ang may mahabang ilong ay itinuturing na mapalad; ngunit ang may mga pandamang nakasiksik o nakakontra ay tinatawag na magnanakaw.
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vainateya)
Concept: External bodily signs are read as indicators of inner disposition (kāma/adharma tendencies) and fortune.
Vedantic Theme: Guṇa-karma interplay shaping embodied traits (prakṛti-lakṣaṇa) and social outcomes; caution against adharma.
Application: Use as a traditional diagnostic/cautionary lens in social dealings; ethically, treat as a prompt for self-restraint and character cultivation rather than fatalism.
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.65 (lakṣaṇa/saṃudrika-style omens and bodily marks)
This verse shows the text’s use of bodily signs (like the nose and sense-faculties) to infer tendencies such as illicit conduct, fortune, or theft—framing character as shaped by prior karma.
By associating moral tendencies (illicit relations, stealing) with karmic imprint, it implies that such actions create results that follow the jīva beyond this life, influencing future experience and destiny.
Treat such signs as cautionary folklore rather than certainty, and focus on cultivating restraint, honesty, and sexual ethics—since conduct (karma) is what the Purana ultimately holds accountable.