Nara-Narayana’s Tapas, Indra’s Temptation, and the Burning of Kama: The Origin of Ananga and the Shiva-Linga Episode
यदासीन्मुष्टिबन्धं तु रुक्मपृष्ठं महाप्रभम् स चम्पकतरुर्जातः सुगन्धाढ्यो गुणाकृतिः
yadāsīnmuṣṭibandhaṃ tu rukmapṛṣṭhaṃ mahāprabham sa campakatarurjātaḥ sugandhāḍhyo guṇākṛtiḥ
Was einst der Handgriff des Bogens gewesen war — goldrückig und von großer Pracht — wurde zu einem Campaka-Baum, reich an Duft und schön an Gestalt.
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Even when desire is ‘burned,’ its energy can be transmuted—here into fragrance and beauty—suggesting sublimation rather than mere negation.
Carita/aakhyāna material with an aetiological function (explaining an origin in the world); it is not primarily genealogical or cosmological.
The campaka’s perfume stands for refined rasa: the gross form of desire is destroyed, but an elevated aesthetic essence remains, aligned with dharma and auspiciousness.