Pṛthu’s Earth-Milking, the Etymology of ‘Pṛthivī,’ and the Vaivasvata (Solar) Genealogy
मासमेकं पुमान्वीरः स्त्रीत्वं मासमभूत्पुनः । बुधस्य भवने तिष्ठन्निलो गर्भधरोभवत्
māsamekaṃ pumānvīraḥ strītvaṃ māsamabhūtpunaḥ | budhasya bhavane tiṣṭhannilo garbhadharobhavat
এক মাস সেই বীর পুরুষ ছিল, আবার এক মাস স্ত্রীভাব প্রাপ্ত হইল। বুধের ভবনে অবস্থান করিতে করিতে নীল গর্ভধারিণী হইল।
Unspecified narrator (contextual narration within Padma Purāṇa; exact dialogue pair not provided in the input)
Concept: Embodiment can be subject to cyclical, time-bound transformations; lineage arises through mysterious intersections of destiny, virtue, and cosmic order.
Application: Cultivate humility about bodily identity and circumstance; focus on dharma and character, which persist through change.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A surreal celestial chamber of Budha: emerald-hued architecture floating amid starfields, with planetary glyphs and lotus motifs. Ila/Nīla stands at the center, half-lit to suggest alternating embodiments—one side masculine, the other feminine—while a subtle aura indicates the mystery of conception under cosmic law.","primary_figures":["Budha (Mercury deity)","Ila/Nīla (transforming figure)","celestial attendants (gandharva/apsaras silhouettes)"],"setting":"Graha-loka palace with astral mandala floor, floating lotuses, and a distant view of the earth-sphere below.","lighting_mood":"moonlit","color_palette":["emerald green","silver","midnight blue","lotus pink","opal white"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Budha enthroned in a gem-studded celestial pavilion, gold leaf halo and ornate pillars; Ila/Nīla depicted with a dual-form composition indicating monthly alternation; starry backdrop rendered with gold dots, rich greens and reds, traditional iconography with lavish ornaments.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: a dreamy astral palace with delicate constellations; Budha in refined attire, Ila/Nīla shown in subtle metamorphic overlay; cool blues and greens, lyrical clouds, fine linework, gentle expressions and soft gradients.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: Budha with characteristic large eyes and stylized crown; bold outlines, flat emerald and yellow pigments; Ila/Nīla in iconic stance with split-color garment to indicate transformation; patterned celestial border motifs and lotus medallions.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: cosmic lotus field with ornate floral borders; Budha centered like a deity icon, Ila/Nīla below in dual-form; deep blue ground with gold star motifs, intricate creepers, peacocks and lotuses framing the graha-loka theme."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"serene","sound_elements":["soft drone (tanpura)","distant temple bells","night insects (stylized)","silence between phrases"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: पुमान्+वीरः→पुमान्वीरः; मासम्+अभूत्→मासमभूत्; अभूत्+पुनः→अभूत्पुनः; तिष्ठन्+इला→तिष्ठन्निला; गर्भधरः+अभवत्→गर्भधरोभवत्।
Budha is the Graha (planetary deity) associated with Mercury; the verse places the event in his “bhavana” (abode), linking the narrative to planetary/astral lore.
It describes alternating male and female embodiment across months and culminates in Nila becoming “garbha-dhara” (pregnant), emphasizing extraordinary, mythic transformations.
Within Purāṇic storytelling, shifting bodily states highlight the impermanence of external identity and the supremacy of cosmic order (daiva/karma) operating through time and celestial powers.