Adhyaya 50 — Mind-Born Progeny, Svayambhuva Manu’s Lineage, and Brahmā’s Ordinance to Duḥsaha (Alakṣmī’s Retinue)
सुखं सिद्धिर्यशः कीर्तिरित्येते धर्मयोनयः ।
कामादतिमुदं हर्षं धर्मपौत्रमसूयत ॥
sukhaṃ siddhir yaśaḥ kīrtir ity ete dharmayonayaḥ | kāmād atimudaṃ harṣaṃ dharmapautram asūyata ||
Glück (Sukha), Vollendung (Siddhi), Ruhm (Yaśas) und Ansehen (Kīrti) werden aus Dharma geboren. Aus Begehren (Kāma) gingen Jubel (Atimuda) und Freude (Harṣa) hervor; Harṣa ist dabei ein Enkel in der Linie des Dharma.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "bhakti", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The Purāṇic model ties social and inner goods (happiness, success, reputation) to dharmic living, while noting that joy and exhilaration also arise from desire—implying the need to govern kāma so that pleasure remains aligned with dharma.
Sarga/Pratisarga-style genealogical enumeration: the ‘creation’ of moral qualities and their outcomes is presented as lineage.
Yaśas and kīrti symbolize the ‘outer radiance’ of inner order; harṣa/atimuda are the volatile waves of kāma, which can either support dharma (as a descendant) or destabilize it when excessive.