Daksha’s Sacrifice and the Origin of Kapalin Rudra (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)
राजसः पञ्चवदनो वेदवेदाङ्गपारगः स्रष्टा चराचरस्यास्य जगतो ऽद्भुतदर्शनः
rājasaḥ pañcavadano vedavedāṅgapāragaḥ sraṣṭā carācarasyāsya jagato 'dbhutadarśanaḥ
El rājasa es de cinco rostros, consumado en los Vedas y los Vedāṅgas; es el creador de todo este mundo, móvil e inmóvil, de apariencia maravillosa.
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The creator-function is grounded in Vedic order: mastery of Veda/Vedāṅga symbolizes that creation is intelligible and structured. Ethically, it elevates śāstra (right knowledge) as the basis for right action in the manifested world.
Sarga: the verse characterizes the creative agency (the sraṣṭā) and the scope of what is produced (cara and ācara).
Five faces commonly symbolize comprehensive cognition and the spread of sacred sound/knowledge in all directions. The ‘moving and unmoving’ pair indicates totality—life and matter, sentient and insentient—within the created order.