निजकर्मानुबंधेन राजपुत्रं गतायुषम् । प्रहर्तुमुद्यते मृत्यौ कोपराधो वद प्रभो
nijakarmānubaṃdhena rājaputraṃ gatāyuṣam | prahartumudyate mṛtyau koparādho vada prabho
“死神受其自身业缘所系,正欲击杀寿命已尽的王子。请告知我,主啊——究竟何罪引发你的忿怒?”
Yama
Listener: Mahārudra/Vīrabhadra
Scene: Yama, composed and authoritative, explains that Death moves to strike only when the prince’s allotted lifespan is exhausted, and asks what specific offense could justify divine anger.
Karma governs embodied life, and death is depicted as the lawful consequence when lifespan is exhausted—yet higher divine purpose may still be revealed.
No site is named in this verse.
None directly; it emphasizes karmic causality rather than a rite.