Purusha-Strī-Lakṣaṇa (Samudrika-śāstra): Marks of Kingship, Wealth, Longevity, and Conduct
घनदीर्घासुसक्तभ्रूर्बालेन्दून्नतसुभ्रुवः / आढ्यो निः स्वश्च खण्डभ्रृर्मध्ये च विनतभ्रुवः
ghanadīrghāsusaktabhrūrbālendūnnatasubhruvaḥ / āḍhyo niḥ svaśca khaṇḍabhrṛrmadhye ca vinatabhruvaḥ
Người có lông mày dày, dài và mọc sát nhau được nói là có phúc. Người có lông mày đẹp, cong như trăng non thì được tôn cao. Người có lông mày đứt đoạn hay không đều được cho là giàu có; người không có lông mày thì nghèo. Người có lông mày trĩu xuống ở giữa bị xem là dấu không lành trong thuật xem tướng.
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra, within a physiognomic description section)
Concept: Eyebrow configurations are treated as karmic indicators of prosperity, elevation, or poverty; mixed phala suggests complexity of karma beyond single markers.
Vedantic Theme: Karma’s multifactor nature within prakriti; cautions against simplistic determinism, hinting at layered causality (sanchita/prarabdha).
Application: Use as a traditional interpretive lens while emphasizing agency: cultivate skills, ethics, and devotion to counter adverse tendencies; read ‘mixed signs’ as need for balanced effort.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.65 (brow/forehead lakshana continuum; immediate neighbors 1.65.71 and 1.65.73)
This verse treats eyebrow-features as omens indicating prosperity, poverty, or general auspiciousness—showing how the text links visible marks with karmic tendencies and life outcomes.
Indirectly: it reflects the Garuda Purana idea that karmic results can appear as outward signs in a person’s body and character, even before afterlife teachings and ritual sections are discussed.
Use it as a traditional cultural lens rather than deterministic fate: prioritize ethical conduct (dharma) and right action (karma), which the Purana consistently treats as the root of real well-being.