Yamapatha (The Road of Yama), Dāna-Phala, and the Imperishable Fruition of Karma
स याति नरकं घोरं कोऽन्यस्तस्मादचेतनः । शरीरं यातनारुपं मलाद्यैः परिदूषितम् ॥ ३३ ॥
sa yāti narakaṃ ghoraṃ ko'nyastasmādacetanaḥ | śarīraṃ yātanārupaṃ malādyaiḥ paridūṣitam || 33 ||
وہ ہولناک دوزخ میں جاتا ہے؛ اس سے بڑھ کر بےحس کون ہوگا؟ کیونکہ وہ ایسے جسم سے چمٹا رہتا ہے جو خود عذاب کی صورت ہے اور میل کچیل وغیرہ سے پوری طرح آلودہ ہے۔
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a didactic passage on embodied suffering and karmic consequence)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
It urges viveka (discernment) and vairagya (dispassion): treating the body as inherently impure and pain-bound, the verse warns that blind attachment and sinful living culminate in naraka, pushing the seeker toward dharma and liberation-oriented practice.
By highlighting the body’s limitations and the danger of delusion, it implicitly points to taking refuge in the divine (especially Vishnu-bhakti in the Narada Purana) as a higher identity than the body—devotion steadies the mind, restrains sin, and redirects life toward moksha.
No specific Vedanga technique is taught in this verse; the practical takeaway is dharmic self-discipline—purity, restraint, and right conduct—principles that support ritual correctness and inner purification emphasized across Vedanga-informed practice.