Mantra-śakti, Dūta-Carā (Envoys & Spies), Vyasana (Calamities), and the Sapta-Upāya of Nīti
दैवोपपीडितं मित्रं ग्रस्तं शत्रुबलेन च कामक्रोधादिसंयुक्तमुत्साहादरिभिर्भवेत्
daivopapīḍitaṃ mitraṃ grastaṃ śatrubalena ca kāmakrodhādisaṃyuktamutsāhādaribhirbhavet
যে বন্ধু ভাগ্যের পীড়ায় ক্লিষ্ট, বা শত্রুবলে পরাভূত, এবং কাম-ক্রোধ প্রভৃতিতে যুক্ত—সে ভুল উৎসাহে শত্রুতে পরিণত হয়।
Lord Agni (instructing the sage Vasiṣṭha in rajadharma and political prudence)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Arthashastra","secondary_vidya":"Philosophy","practical_application":"Alliance management: identifying when an ally becomes unreliable due to misfortune, defeat, and inner vices; informing diplomatic distancing, surveillance, and contingency planning.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Description","entry_title":"Mitra-viparyaya: When a friend turns enemy through daiva, defeat, and krodha-kama","lookup_keywords":["mitra","daivopapīḍita","śatrubala","kāma krodha","ari-bhāva"],"quick_summary":"An ally oppressed by fate, crushed by enemy power, and driven by desire/anger may, through misguided zeal, transform into an enemy; prudent policy treats such a friend as a latent threat."}
Concept: Inner passions (kāma, krodha, etc.) distort loyalty; external pressure (daiva, defeat) reveals character and shifts relationships.
Application: Cultivate self-control in leadership circles; in policy, assess allies by stability, capacity, and temperament, not by past friendship alone.
Khanda Section: Rajadharma (Statecraft and Governance: allies, enemies, and political strategy)
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A once-friendly king, battered by enemy troops and troubled by anger and desire, turns away from his ally; messengers and spies observe the shift in allegiance.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural: two kings facing each other, one shadowed and distressed with enemy soldiers behind him, expressive eyes showing anger, spies at the margins, strong outlines and symbolic gestures","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore: allied kings with ornate crowns; one king’s posture turns hostile, enemy banners behind, gold highlights on regalia, dramatic but formal composition","mysore_prompt":"Mysore: instructional diplomacy tableau—ally, enemy force, and the passions (kāma/krodha) symbolized as whispering figures near the ally’s ear; clean lines and explanatory clarity","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature: diplomatic meeting in a pavilion, subtle facial expressions showing betrayal, enemy camp visible in background, courtiers and scribes, intricate textiles and architecture"}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Todi","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: दैवोपपीडितम् → दैव + उपपीडितम् (अ + उ → ओ); संयुक्तमुत्साहात् → संयुक्तम् + उत्साहात् (म् + उ → मु); अरिभिर्भवेत् → अरिभिः + भवेत् (ः + भ → र्भ).
Related Themes: Agni Purana 240 (Rajadharma: mitra-ari lakshana; vyasana and political conduct)
It imparts political prudence in rajadharma: an ally weakened by misfortune, enemy pressure, and uncontrolled passions can become hostile due to rash zeal; such allies must be assessed cautiously.
Beyond theology and ritual, the Agni Purana also codifies practical governance—diplomacy, alliance management, and threat analysis—showing its wide-ranging, encyclopedic coverage of dharma and worldly administration.
It underscores mastery over kāma and krodha as a dharmic necessity: uncontrolled passions destabilize relationships and lead to adharma, while discernment and self-restraint preserve righteous order in society.