Lakṣaṇas of Men: Feet, Shanks, Hair, Genitals, Abdomen, and Lines of Longevity
Forehead & Palm
श्लिष्टाङ्गुली ताम्रनखौ सुगुल्फौ शिरयोज्झितौ / कूर्मोन्नतौ च चरणौ स्यातां नृपवरस्य हि
śliṣṭāṅgulī tāmranakhau sugulphau śirayojjhitau / kūrmonnatau ca caraṇau syātāṃ nṛpavarasya hi
افضل بادشاہ کے قدم ایسے ہوں: انگلیاں باہم جڑی ہوئی، ناخن تانبئی رنگ کے، ٹخنے خوش ساختہ، رگیں نمایاں، اور تلوے کچھوے کی مانند ابھرے ہوئے۔
Lord Vishnu (to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Ruler’s auspicious marks (close toes, coppery nails, firm ankles, prominent veins, tortoise-like raised soles) signify stability, endurance, and capacity to bear responsibility.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma of rulership (rāja-dharma) operates in vyavahāra; bodily symbolism encodes virtues like steadiness (sthiti) and resilience (dhṛti).
Application: For leadership, prioritize steadiness, resilience, and groundedness; interpret ‘tortoise-like’ as metaphor for stability and self-control.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.63 (rāja/nara-lakṣaṇa continuation)
This verse treats physical features as traditional indicators of character and destiny, describing auspicious signs expected in an exemplary ruler.
It does not directly discuss the soul’s journey; instead, it belongs to a lakshana (signs) section that outlines auspicious traits associated with worldly dharma, such as ideal kingship.
Read it as a cultural-ethical ideal: leadership should be evaluated by dharmic conduct and responsibility, while such bodily descriptions remain part of traditional symbolism rather than a sole basis for judgment.