The Narrative of Suvrata: Tapas, Surrender-Prayer, and Cyclical Time
संसारवृक्षमतिजीर्णमपीह उच्चं मायासुकंदकरुणा बहुदुःखशाखम् । जायादिसंगच्छदनं फलितं मुरारे तत्राधिरूढपतितं भगवन्हि रक्ष
saṃsāravṛkṣamatijīrṇamapīha uccaṃ māyāsukaṃdakaruṇā bahuduḥkhaśākham | jāyādisaṃgacchadanaṃ phalitaṃ murāre tatrādhirūḍhapatitaṃ bhagavanhi rakṣa
يا مُراري، إنّ شجرة السَّمسارة العالية—وإن كانت باليةً عتيقة—جذعُها المايا، وتمتلئ بفروعٍ كثيرة من الحزن. وسقفُها تعلّقاتٌ كالزوجة وما سواها، وهي مُثمرة. لقد صعدتُها ثم سقطتُ؛ يا ربّ، فاحفظني منها حقًّا.
Unknown (verse is a direct supplication to Vishnu as Murāri; surrounding dialogue not provided)
Concept: Saṃsāra is an ancient, lofty structure sustained by māyā; only Bhagavān’s protection rescues the fallen jīva.
Application: Notice how attachments (family-identity, possessiveness) become the ‘canopy’; practice daily surrender—name-remembrance and offering outcomes to Viṣṇu—especially when entanglement causes a ‘fall’.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A colossal, time-worn tree rises into stormy skies—its trunk formed of shimmering illusion, its branches twisted into sorrowful limbs. A lone devotee has climbed into the dense canopy of household attachments and now slips, falling toward a shadowed abyss, while Murāri appears in radiant blue, extending a protective hand and casting a lotus-like aura that arrests the fall.","primary_figures":["Murāri (Kṛṣṇa/Viṣṇu)","a fallen devotee (jīva)","personified Māyā (subtle, optional)"],"setting":"Mythic landscape: the ‘saṃsāra-tree’ on a cliff-edge above a misty chasm; faint silhouettes of household life woven into the canopy.","lighting_mood":"divine radiance breaking through gloom","color_palette":["sapphire blue","smoky indigo","ash gray","lotus pink","gold leaf"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Murāri in sapphire-blue standing on a lotus pedestal, right hand in abhaya and left holding a conch; a towering saṃsāra-tree with stylized sorrow-branches and a falling devotee below; heavy gold leaf halo, ornate crown, gem-studded ornaments, rich vermilion and emerald borders, temple-arch framing, intricate floral filigree.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: a lyrical yet ominous saṃsāra-tree on a Himalayan slope, delicate brushwork showing mist and layered hills; the devotee slipping from a canopy of domestic scenes; Kṛṣṇa appearing in soft radiance with refined facial features, cool blues and muted greens, thin gold accents, flowing drapery.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines and natural pigments; Murāri with large expressive eyes and elaborate mukuta, emanating a circular prabhāmaṇḍala; the saṃsāra-tree rendered as a symbolic motif with sorrow-branches; strong red/yellow/green palette with deep blue for the deity, temple-wall aesthetic.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: Kṛṣṇa centered with lotus motifs and ornate floral borders; the saṃsāra-tree stylized as a decorative yet dark motif behind him; peacocks and cows at the margins as symbols of refuge; deep indigo background with gold highlights, intricate vine patterns, Nathdwara-inspired ornamentation."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"emotional","sound_elements":["low temple bell","distant conch shell","wind through leaves","brief silence between pādas"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: संसारवृक्षम्+अतिजीर्णम्+अपि+इह → संसारवृक्षमतिजीर्णमपीह; जाया+आदि → जायादि; सङ्ग+च्छदनम् → संगच्छदनम्; तत्र+अधिरूढपतितम् → तत्राधिरूढपतितम्; भगवन्+हि → भगवन्हि
It portrays saṃsāra (worldly existence) as a tall tree: māyā is its trunk, many sorrows are its branches, and attachments like spouse and family form its canopy—showing how entanglement leads to downfall.
The speaker directly appeals to Vishnu (Murāri) for rescue, expressing helplessness after falling into saṃsāra—an archetypal bhakti posture of surrender and reliance on divine grace.
It warns against being overpowered by māyā and binding attachments, urging vigilance and spiritual refuge in God when one recognizes suffering and instability in worldly pursuits.