The Account of Sukalā in the Vena Episode: The Sow, the Sons, and Royal Restraint
लुब्धको झार्झरो नाम ददृशे स तु सूकरीम् । कुर्वंतीं कदनं तेषां दुःसहां सुभटैरपि
lubdhako jhārjharo nāma dadṛśe sa tu sūkarīm | kurvaṃtīṃ kadanaṃ teṣāṃ duḥsahāṃ subhaṭairapi
তাৰ পাছত ঝাৰঝৰ নামৰ এজন চিকাৰীয়ে এজনী গাহৰি দেখিলে, যিয়ে তেওঁলোকক সংহাৰ কৰিছিল - ইমান ভয়ংকৰ যে সাহসী যোদ্ধাসকলে তাক সহ্য কৰিব পৰা নাছিল।
Narrator (contextual; specific dialogue speaker not explicit in this single verse)
Concept: Violence begets counter-violence; earthly power (even of warriors) can be overturned by a seemingly lesser being—hinting at karma’s unpredictability.
Application: Do not underestimate forces of nature; cultivate humility; recognize that aggression can rebound unexpectedly.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: forest
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"In a dense forest clearing churned by hooves, the hunter Jhārjhara freezes as a massive sow charges through a ring of fallen fighters, her eyes blazing and tusks slick with mud. The scene captures the terrifying majesty of untamed strength—so fierce that even armored warriors recoil.","primary_figures":["Jhārjhara (hunter)","sūkarī (sow/boar)","terrified warriors"],"setting":"thick woodland with sal and banyan trees, broken spears, trampled grass, dust and leaves swirling in the air","lighting_mood":"forest dappled","color_palette":["earth brown","moss green","iron gray","blood crimson","dusty ochre"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: dramatic forest battle—boar-like sow in dynamic pose, hunter with bow drawn; gold leaf accents on weapons and ornaments, rich earthy reds/greens, stylized trees, ornate border framing the action with traditional motifs.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: kinetic woodland scene with delicate foliage, the sow mid-charge, warriors scattered; cool greens and browns, fine brushwork for fur and leaves, expressive faces, narrative clarity in a compact composition.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold-outlined sow with exaggerated heroic energy, hunter poised; strong red-yellow-green palette, patterned forest backdrop, stylized motion lines, temple-wall grandeur applied to a wild episode.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: forest vignette bordered by lotus vines; deep indigo ground with gold floral motifs; the sow rendered with decorative patterning, figures arranged rhythmically like a narrative frieze."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"fast-dramatic","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["rustling leaves","war cries (distant)","bowstring twang (anticipatory)","drumming pulse","animal snort and hoof-thud"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: दुःसहां = दुः + सहाम् (उपसर्गपूर्वक-विशेषण); सुभटैरपि = सुभटैः + अपि.
Jhārjhara is identified as a lubdhaka (hunter) who encounters the sow described as overpowering others.
The verse says the hunter sees a sow causing great destruction among “them,” and her ferocity is portrayed as unbearable even for brave fighters.
It highlights the theme that raw force or unexpected power can overturn human confidence—strength is not always where one assumes it to be.