Origin of the Lunar Dynasty: Soma’s Rise, the Tārā Abduction War, Budha–Purūravas Genealogy, and Kārtavīrya Arjuna
यस्माद्वंशपतिः सार्द्धं समये तदधिष्ठितः । तं दृष्ट्वाचष्ट सोमेन तस्मात्सोमोभवद्विभुः
yasmādvaṃśapatiḥ sārddhaṃ samaye tadadhiṣṭhitaḥ | taṃ dṛṣṭvācaṣṭa somena tasmātsomobhavadvibhuḥ
ولأن سيّد ذلك النسب قد أُقيم هناك على الوجه اللائق في الوقت المعيَّن، فلمّا رآه سوما خاطبه؛ فلذلك عُرف الجليل القوي باسم «سوما».
Narrator (context not specified in the provided excerpt)
Concept: Cosmic roles and names arise through proper establishment (samaye…adhiṣṭhitaḥ) and recognition within divine order; identity is linked to function and blessing.
Application: Honor right timing and proper installation in life’s duties (saṃskāra, initiation, taking responsibility); let titles follow service and recognition, not ego.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A celestial court scene where Soma, radiant and cool, addresses a dignified ‘lord of the lineage’ being ceremonially established at the proper time. The moment feels like a cosmic investiture: garlands, subtle mantras in the air, and the moon’s sheen settling into its destined name and role.","primary_figures":["Soma (Chandra)","Lineage-lord (vamsapati, unspecified)","Attendant devas/sages"],"setting":"Celestial assembly with cloud-thrones, starry canopy, and ritual platform for installation.","lighting_mood":"moonlit","color_palette":["silver white","midnight blue","pale turquoise","soft lavender","ritual gold"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Soma with a silver-gold halo, seated on a cloud-lotus, addressing an enthroned vamsapati on a jeweled platform; gold leaf highlights on crowns and ornaments, rich maroon-green borders, stylized stars and auspicious motifs.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: delicate moonlit durbar in the sky, Soma’s cool radiance painted with subtle washes; refined faces, thin lines, star-speckled indigo background, gentle ceremonial gestures and garlands.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: Soma with bold outlines and luminous white face, ornate crown; installation platform with symmetrical attendants; strong reds/yellows/greens with patterned celestial backdrop.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: Soma centered within a circular moon mandala, surrounded by floral borders and star motifs; ceremonial figures arranged symmetrically; deep indigo cloth with silver-gold detailing and lotus vines."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Desh","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["soft conch shell","celestial chimes","low drum pulse","whispered mantra ambience"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: yasmāt+vaṃśapatiḥ→yasmādvaṃśapatiḥ (t+d before v); dṛṣṭvā+acaṣṭa→dṛṣṭvācaṣṭa (ā+a→ā); tasmāt+somaḥ→tasmātsomo (t+s); somaḥ+abhavat→somobhavat (aḥ+a→o); abhavat+vibhuḥ→abhadvibhuḥ (t+v sandhi; often written abhavadvibhuḥ).
Soma is the deity associated with the Moon and the sacred soma essence; here the verse uses Soma as a named figure who addresses another person, leading to an etymological naming of ‘Soma’.
It explains a naming/epithet tradition: upon a rightful establishment at the proper time, Soma’s addressing (or naming) results in the figure being known as ‘Soma’—a brief Purāṇic etymology.
The verse emphasizes propriety and right order (samaya): rightful establishment at the proper time is presented as a meaningful condition that legitimizes status and naming within sacred history.