Merit of Causeways and Crossings, Temple Construction Rewards, and the Rudrākṣa Mahātmya
अतस्तु गणिकां स्पृष्ट्वा नरः स्नानाद्विशुध्यति । मलिनां दुर्गतिं याति बहुपूरुषसंश्रयात्
atastu gaṇikāṃ spṛṣṭvā naraḥ snānādviśudhyati | malināṃ durgatiṃ yāti bahupūruṣasaṃśrayāt
لذلك فإنّ الرجل إذا لمس غانيكا (مومسًا) تطهّر بالاغتسال؛ أمّا هي، وقد تلوّثت لاعتمادها على رجالٍ كثيرين، فتمضي إلى حالٍ شقيّ.
Unspecified (narrative voice within Adhyāya 59; speaker not explicitly identified from the provided excerpt).
Concept: Ritual purity can be restored through snāna for the toucher, while sustained entanglement in adharma is portrayed as spiritually corrosive.
Application: When one errs, take concrete steps to cleanse and reset—bathe, pray, seek ethical repair—while also addressing patterns that perpetuate harm.
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: river
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"At a quiet riverbank, a man steps into cool water at dawn, palms joined, as ripples carry away symbolic darkness. On the far bank, a distant figure sits alone under a withered tree, suggesting the heavier karmic burden of repeated entanglement; the scene contrasts immediate cleansing with long-term consequence.","primary_figures":["a penitent man","river goddess presence (subtle, symbolic)","a distant solitary woman figure (allegorical)"],"setting":"River ghat with stone steps, small shrine, water pots, and morning mist; a boundary between near-bank ritual and far-bank solitude.","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["mist pearl","river teal","sunrise gold","sandalwood beige","soft crimson"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: dawn snāna at a ghat with gold-leaf sun halo, ornate water pots and small shrine, penitent figure in añjali; rich reds/greens with gold embellishment, stylized waves and lotus motifs, devotional clarity.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: delicate river landscape with pale mist, fine ripples, and a small ghat; expressive yet restrained figures, cool blues and soft golds, lyrical naturalism emphasizing purification and moral reflection.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlined river-goddess symbolism, penitent figure performing snāna, stylized lotuses and waves; natural pigments with red/yellow/green dominance, temple-wall aesthetic.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: riverbank framed by lotus borders and floral filigree; central figure bathing with devotional posture, peacocks and lotuses as purity symbols, deep blues with gold highlights."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Bhupali","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"serene","sound_elements":["flowing water","morning birds","soft temple bell","silence between lines"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: atastu = atas + tu; snānādviśudhyati = snānāt + viśudhyati (t + v → d + v); bahupūruṣasaṃśrayāt treated as tatpuruṣa compound in pañcamī singular.
It frames snāna (ritual bathing) as a means of restoring purity (śauca) for the man after physical contact, reflecting a dharma-śāstra-like concern with purity rules.
It presents a moralized judgment that her dependence on many men is spiritually degrading, contrasting her fate with the man’s ability to regain purity through bathing.
Not directly; it is primarily an ethical/purity-rule statement rather than a devotional (bhakti) or doctrinal exposition.