Annadāna and the Obstruction of Viṣṇu-Darśana; Vāmadeva’s Teaching and the Vāsudeva Stotra Prelude
यथायथा च राजा च भक्षते च कलेवरम् । हसेते वै सदा नार्यौ तयोर्भावं वदाम्यहम्
yathāyathā ca rājā ca bhakṣate ca kalevaram | hasete vai sadā nāryau tayorbhāvaṃ vadāmyaham
كما أن الملك يلتهم الجسد مرة بعد مرة، كذلك تضحك المرأتان على الدوام؛ وسأبيّن مقصدهما.
Unspecified narrator (contextual speaker not provided in the input excerpt)
Concept: Repeated self-consumption (ātma-bhakṣaṇa) symbolizes self-destructive indulgence; the laughter of the two women hints at inner faculties (e.g., prajñā and śraddhā) observing the king’s folly.
Application: Notice patterns where pleasure ‘consumes’ health, time, or integrity; cultivate śraddhā-led restraint and redirect consumption into offering/service.
Primary Rasa: hasya
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A troubled king sits at a banquet where the food on his golden plate subtly transforms into fragments of his own body—an allegory rendered as a surreal vision. Two women stand behind a veil of symbolism, laughing softly: one radiant with clear-eyed wisdom, the other steady with unwavering faith, their laughter both compassionate and unsettling.","primary_figures":["the king (rājā)","two women as allegories: Prajñā and Śraddhā"],"setting":"Royal hall that dissolves into an allegorical dreamspace—half palace, half shadowy inner-mind landscape","lighting_mood":"moonlit","color_palette":["smoky violet","antique gold","ashen white","crimson highlights","pearl silver"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a regal king on a jeweled throne with a banquet platter; the platter’s contents morph into symbolic flesh rendered tastefully as allegory; two feminine figures behind—Prajñā with a luminous halo and Śraddhā with a lotus and prayer beads—gold leaf radiance, rich reds/greens, ornate palace pillars, heavy jewelry and traditional iconography.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: refined palace interior with delicate lines; the king’s plate shows a subtle metamorphosis into self-consuming imagery; two women in translucent veils laugh gently, one holding a manuscript (prajñā), the other a lamp/lotus (śraddhā); cool nocturnal palette, lyrical restraint, expressive eyes.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines—king seated, exaggerated symbolic platter; two women as personified virtues with stylized ornaments; flat pigments, dramatic contrast, temple-wall composition with narrative panels and decorative borders.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central medallion with the king and symbolic platter; surrounding lotus vines and peacocks; the two women placed symmetrically like attendant goddesses; deep blue ground with gold detailing, intricate floral borders, allegory conveyed through motifs rather than gore."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"emotional","sound_elements":["low drum pulse","soft laughter (distant)","palace ambience fading into silence","wind through corridors","single bell strike"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: वदाम्यहम् = वदामि + अहम् (इ + अ → य).
The verse itself presents a first-person narrator (“I shall explain”), but the specific named speaker cannot be confirmed from this single excerpt; it depends on the surrounding chapter dialogue.
The imagery points to a critique of harmful, degrading, or deluded behavior, setting up an explanation of the “two women’s” intention—often a prelude to an allegorical moral about desire, attachment, or ignorance.
The verse signals an allegory: the “two women” are likely symbolic figures (e.g., paired forces such as desire/aversion, praise/blame, or illusion/insight). Their exact identification requires the immediate narrative context of Adhyaya 97.