Indranīla (Blue Sapphire): Source-Myth, Grades, Tests, Substitutes, and Price
यावन्तं च क्रमेदग्निं पद्मरागोपयोगतः / इन्द्रनीलमणिस्तस्मात्क्रमेत सुमहत्तरम्
yāvantaṃ ca kramedagniṃ padmarāgopayogataḥ / indranīlamaṇistasmātkrameta sumahattaram
وبقدر ما يمكن للنار أن تمتدّ باستعمال بَدْمَراغا (الياقوت الأحمر)، فإن جوهرة إِندْرَنِيلَا (السفير الأزرق) تجعلها تمتدّ أبعد من ذلك بكثير.
Lord Viṣṇu (speaking to Garuḍa/Vainateya)
Concept: Comparative efficacy of upāyas: indranīla is said to amplify fire’s ‘advance’ more than padmarāga.
Vedantic Theme: Kārya-kāraṇa in vyavahāra: specific causes (materials) are taught to yield specific effects; not a mokṣa doctrine but a pragmatic causal claim.
Application: If following this tradition, treat sapphire as a stronger agent than ruby in contexts where ‘agni-krama’ (fire’s spread/advance) is relevant; apply with caution and under expert guidance.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.72.11 (agni-krama comparison of padmarāga and indranīla)
This verse presents gems as materially distinct in potency, using the metaphor of how far they can make fire ‘advance,’ implying graded effectiveness of substances in prescribed ritual or applied contexts.
It does not directly describe the soul’s journey; rather, it belongs to an instructional section using comparative measures of efficacy (here, ruby vs. blue sapphire) to convey hierarchy among ritual substances.
Treat traditional prescriptions as context-sensitive: if one follows ritual traditions, prioritize clarity of purpose and proper guidance, recognizing that texts often rank materials by intended effect rather than by mere ornamentation.