Multi-form Manifestations, Indra–Kāma Incarnations, Pravāha, and the Twofold Buddhi
Sense-Discipline and Exclusive Refuge in Viṣṇu
कार्पासं वै तेन दत्तं गृहीत्वा संतिष्ठमाने यमदूतैश्च सम्यक् / संहन्यमानस्तीक्षणधारैः कुठारैः कुलालदेवं च सुदंष्ट्रनेत्रम् / विहाय वै कुत्र पलायितोभून्न ज्ञायते ऽन्वेषणाच्चापि केन
kārpāsaṃ vai tena dattaṃ gṛhītvā saṃtiṣṭhamāne yamadūtaiśca samyak / saṃhanyamānastīkṣaṇadhāraiḥ kuṭhāraiḥ kulāladevaṃ ca sudaṃṣṭranetram / vihāya vai kutra palāyitobhūnna jñāyate 'nveṣaṇāccāpi kena
Cầm lấy bông vải mà người ấy đã cho, hắn đứng đó khi các sứ giả của Yama vây kín tứ phía. Bị chém bằng những lưỡi rìu sắc bén, hắn bỏ rơi Kulāladeva—vị thần thợ gốm với mắt trợn dữ và nanh nhọn—rồi chạy trốn; nhưng hắn đã chạy về đâu thì không ai biết, dẫu có tìm kiếm cũng chẳng rõ.
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Afterlife Stage: Naraka
Concept: Karmic consequence is inescapable; at Yama’s enforcement, chosen limited refuges collapse. The verse underscores the futility of relying on fierce local deities when karma ripens.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-phala as niyati within saṃsāra; only the supreme refuge transcends fear, while finite supports fail.
Application: Live ethically to avoid papa-phala; cultivate higher refuge (Viṣṇu-smaraṇa) rather than fear-based propitiation of fierce forms.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Type: liminal holding area / approach to judgment
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa: Yamadūtas’ punishments with weapons; catalogues of torments and the soul’s helplessness (thematic); Garuda Purana: repeated rhetorical motif of abandoned/ineffective devatā-āśraya (thematic)
This verse portrays Yamadutas as the executors of karmic justice—surrounding, restraining, and inflicting punishment so that the consequences of wrongdoing are directly experienced.
It depicts a terrified being in Yama’s domain trying to escape torment, but remaining traceable and bound by the order of Yama—suggesting that post-death experiences follow karmic law rather than personal will.
Live with restraint and accountability: avoid harmful actions that lead to suffering later, and adopt dharmic conduct (truthfulness, non-violence, ethical livelihood) to reduce fearful consequences described in the afterlife narratives.