Invocations, Definition and Authority of Purāṇa, Pulastya–Bhīṣma Frame, and the Creation–Dissolution Schema
कल्पितः शिंशुमारश्च यस्य पुच्छे ध्रुवः स्थितः । संभवांते च संहारः संहारांते च संभवः
kalpitaḥ śiṃśumāraśca yasya pucche dhruvaḥ sthitaḥ | saṃbhavāṃte ca saṃhāraḥ saṃhārāṃte ca saṃbhavaḥ
وقد تَصُوِّرَ الشِّمشومارا السماوي، وعلى طرفِ ذَنَبِه يقف دْهروفا. في نهايةِ الخلقِ يكون الفناء، وفي نهايةِ الفناءِ يكون الخلقُ من جديد.
Unspecified (narrative voice within Sṛṣṭikhaṇḍa cosmology section)
Concept: Creation and dissolution are cyclic; stability (Dhruva) persists as a reference even as forms arise and subside.
Application: Hold life’s changes within a larger cycle; practice detachment from transient phases while keeping devotion steady—like Dhruva at the tail-tip of the cosmic form.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A majestic celestial Śiṃśumāra—half-constellation, half-divine creature—arches across the night sky, its body composed of star clusters and zodiacal glyphs. At the very tip of its tail, Dhruva shines like a fixed diamond, while below the creature’s curve, waves of creation dissolve into mist and re-form again, illustrating sṛṣṭi and pralaya as breathing cycles.","primary_figures":["Śiṃśumāra (cosmic form)","Dhruva"],"setting":"Deep-space panorama with constellation anatomy, zodiac band, and a subtle cosmic ocean beneath.","lighting_mood":"moonlit","color_palette":["midnight blue","silver","opal white","amethyst","pale gold"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Śiṃśumāra rendered as a divine constellation-creature with gold leaf outlining star-points and zodiac symbols, Dhruva as a large gem-like star at the tail-tip; rich maroon background, ornate borders, stylized cosmic ocean at the bottom with gold highlights.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: delicate star mapping forming the Śiṃśumāra silhouette, Dhruva as a bright pinpoint, soft misty bands showing dissolution and re-creation; cool palette, fine lines, poetic negative space, gentle gradients.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlined Śiṃśumāra with patterned star-rosettes, Dhruva as a lotus-star emblem at the tail, cyclical waves below in stylized curls; strong reds/yellows/greens with black outlines, symmetrical mural composition.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: Śiṃśumāra suggested through floral-constellation motifs, Dhruva as central jeweled lotus medallion near the border, repeating circular patterns to symbolize cycles; deep indigo cloth, gold paint highlights, intricate lotus borders and vine work."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"reverent-soft","sound_elements":["low tanpura","soft conch at transitions","distant wind","profound silence"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: शिंशुमारश्च = शिंशुमारः च; संभवांते = संभव-अन्ते; संहारांते = संहार-अन्ते.
Dhruva refers to the Pole Star (and the revered Dhruva figure). Placing him at the tail-tip of the cosmic Śiṃśumāra symbolizes fixedness and orientation—Dhruva as the stable pivot-point around which celestial motion is understood.
Śiṃśumāra is a conceived cosmic form used to map the heavens (a puranic constellation-image). The verse presents it as a symbolic structure in which Dhruva occupies a defining position.
It teaches cyclical time: creation (sṛṣṭi/saṃbhava) and dissolution (pralaya/saṃhāra) recur endlessly, indicating a universe that undergoes periodic manifestation and withdrawal rather than a single linear beginning and end.