Puṣkara Invocation, the Dharma-Wheel at Naimiṣa, and the Padma Purāṇa Prologue
तद्वृत्तान्ताश्रयं यस्मात्पाद्ममित्युच्यते ततः । एतत्पुराणममलं विष्णुमाहात्म्यनिर्मलम्
tadvṛttāntāśrayaṃ yasmātpādmamityucyate tataḥ | etatpurāṇamamalaṃ viṣṇumāhātmyanirmalam
Porque se apoya en aquel relato, por eso se llama Padma (Purāṇa). Este Purāṇa es inmaculado, purificado por completo por la glorificación de Viṣṇu.
Unspecified (narratorial voice within Adhyaya 1; exact dialogue frame not provided in the input)
Concept: The Padma Purāṇa is ‘amala’ because it is purified by single-pointed glorification of Viṣṇu; devotion is presented as intrinsically purifying.
Application: Make daily space for Viṣṇu-stuti (names, hymns, reading); treat devotional remembrance as a cleansing discipline for mind and speech.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A sage-reciter holds a palm-leaf manuscript titled ‘Pādma’, while behind him a vast lotus unfurls into a luminous vision of Viṣṇu, suggesting that the text’s very ink is sanctified by Hari’s praise. The air feels washed clean—like a temple after ārati—signaling ‘amala’ purity.","primary_figures":["Viṣṇu (radiant form)","sage-reciter (Vyāsa-like or Sūta-like)","attendant ṛṣis (optional)"],"setting":"Forest āśrama or a quiet recitation hall with a lotus motif altar; manuscript stand, water pot, and incense.","lighting_mood":"temple lamp-lit","color_palette":["warm gold","sandalwood beige","deep indigo","lotus rose","leaf green"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: central sage holding a palm-leaf ‘Padma Purāṇa’ manuscript, behind him a large haloed Viṣṇu emerging from a stylized lotus; thick gold leaf for halos and manuscript borders, rich maroon and green drapery, ornate jewelry, symmetrical temple arch framing the scene.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: intimate āśrama recitation with a sage reading from a manuscript; a translucent vision of Viṣṇu appears within a lotus-shaped aura; delicate lines, soft earth tones, cool shadows, refined expressions, minimal gold, lyrical trees and distant hills.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: frontal sage with manuscript, bold outlines; Viṣṇu in a lotus aura above, with characteristic large eyes and crown; strong red-yellow-green palette, decorative bands and floral motifs, temple-wall compositional symmetry.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: manuscript and lotus motifs integrated into ornate borders; central Viṣṇu in deep blue with gold highlights, surrounded by repeating lotus medallions and stylized peacocks; intricate white detailing and devotional textile symmetry."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"devotional","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"reverent-soft","sound_elements":["temple bells","tanpura drone","soft mridangam pulse","incense crackle (implied quiet)"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: tadvṛttāntāśrayaṃ = tad + vṛttānta + āśrayam; yasmātpādmamityucyate = yasmāt + pādmam + iti + ucyate; etatpurāṇamamalam = etatpurāṇam + amalam; viṣṇumāhātmyanirmalam = viṣṇu + māhātmya + nirmalam.
The verse states it is called “Pādma” because it is grounded in (“āśrayaṃ”) a particular prior account (“tad-vṛttānta”), i.e., a lotus/Padma-related narrative context referenced in the surrounding passage.
It describes the Purāṇa as “spotless” and specifically “pure through the glorification of Viṣṇu” (viṣṇu-māhātmya-nirmalam), foregrounding a Vaiṣṇava devotional orientation.
The verse frames the Padma Purāṇa as a reliable, purified source for understanding and venerating Viṣṇu’s greatness, suggesting that engagement with it is meant to elevate devotion and clarity of faith.