Adhyāya 314 — हिमवदाश्रमः, शक्तिक्षेपकथा, तथा स्वाध्यायविधिः
Himalayan Hermitage, the Myth of the Thrown Spear, and Rules of Vedic Study
तथैवोत्क्रामिण: स्थान देहिनो वै विपद्यत: । कालेन यद्धि प्राप्रोति स्थानं तत् प्रतब्रवीहि मे
tathaivotkrāmiṇaḥ sthānaṃ dehino vai vipadyataḥ | kālena yaddhi prāpnoti sthānaṃ tat prabravīhi me ||
阇那迦王说道:“同样地,当具身者将亡、生命之息离去之时,依时依缘,它在次第中将抵达何处?请清楚告诉我:死亡之际,它所到达的‘处所’究竟是什么。”
जनक उवाच
The verse frames a philosophical inquiry central to Śānti Parva: the ‘post-mortem destination’ of the embodied self is not random but conditioned by time, circumstance, and (implicitly) one’s karma and inner state at death. Janaka seeks a precise account of the soul’s course after the life-breath departs.
King Janaka, in a dialogue on liberation and the nature of the self, asks the teacher to explain what happens at the moment of death—specifically, where the departing being goes ‘in due course’ when it leaves the body.