The Nahusha Episode: Aśokasundarī’s Austerity and Huṇḍa’s Doom
आकर्ण्य सर्वं मुनिना प्रयुक्तमाश्चर्यभूतं स हि चिंत्यमानः । तस्यांतमेकः परिकर्तुकाम आयोः सुतः कोपमथो चकार
ākarṇya sarvaṃ muninā prayuktamāścaryabhūtaṃ sa hi ciṃtyamānaḥ | tasyāṃtamekaḥ parikartukāma āyoḥ sutaḥ kopamatho cakāra
Als er alles vernommen hatte, was der Muni gesprochen—wahrlich wunderbar—, sann er darüber nach. Dann, um dem ein Ende zu bereiten, geriet einer der Söhne Ayus in Zorn.
Narrator (context not fully specified from the single verse)
Concept: Awe at dhārmic teaching should mature into humility; when ego seeks to ‘end’ the teaching, anger arises and dharma declines.
Application: When confronted with profound counsel, pause before reacting; notice the impulse to dominate or shut down—choose reflection over anger.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: raudra
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A prince of Āyu’s line stands apart after hearing the sage—his face half-lit with wonder, half-shadowed by brewing rage. Around him, the hermitage/court remains calm, but the air tightens as his hand clenches, signaling the coming rupture.","primary_figures":["son of Āyu (unnamed)","sage (speaker of the prior counsel)","Nahuṣa (implied presence)"],"setting":"assembly near an āśrama: kusa seats, a banyan trunk, a low fire altar, onlookers frozen mid-breath","lighting_mood":"forest dappled","color_palette":["amber","indigo shadow","banyan green","ash white","rust red"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: dramatic split-composition—sage calm with gold halo and soft gestures, the prince with sharpened brows and tense posture; gold leaf highlights on ornaments, rich vermilion and emerald textiles, stylized flames and lotus borders emphasizing the moral contrast.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: subtle facial expression—eyes widened in astonishment, then narrowed; cool greens and muted earth tones, delicate trees and a quiet sky; the prince slightly isolated in the frame to show inner turmoil.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines and expressive eyes; the prince’s krodha shown through red accents and dynamic stance, while the sage remains in serene yellow-green tones; temple-wall composition with ornamental bands.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: ornate floral border with lotus motifs; central figures in a narrative tableau, peacocks reacting with raised crests; deep blue ground with gold detailing, symbolic clouds swirling near the angry prince."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["low drum pulse","wind through leaves","sudden hush","distant conch"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: प्रयुक्तमाश्चर्यभूतं = प्रयुक्तम् + आश्चर्यभूतम्; तस्यांतम् = तस्य + अन्तम्; अथो = अथ + उ
After hearing the sage’s astonishing account, a son of Ayu reflects and then becomes angry, intending to bring the matter to an end.
It highlights how even profound or wondrous teachings can provoke resistance; anger (krodha) can arise when someone seeks to abruptly “cut off” a situation rather than understand it fully.
Not directly. This single verse is primarily narrative and psychological (hearing, pondering, anger) and does not explicitly foreground a sectarian doctrine.