काव्यगुणविवेकः
Examination of the Qualities of Poetry
यः काव्ये महतीं छायामनुगृह्णात्यसौ गुणैः सम्भवत्येष सामान्यो वैशेषिक इति द्विधा
yaḥ kāvye mahatīṃ chāyāmanugṛhṇātyasau guṇaiḥ sambhavatyeṣa sāmānyo vaiśeṣika iti dvidhā
જે કવિ ગુણોના કારણે કાવ્યમાં મહાન ‘છાયા’ (પરિષ્કૃત કાવ્ય-આભા) પ્રાપ્ત કરે છે, તેની છાયા બે પ્રકારની માનવામાં આવે છે—સામાન્ય અને વૈશેષિક।
Lord Agni (in instruction to sage Vasiṣṭha, in the Agni Purana’s kāvya-śāstra section)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Alamkara","secondary_vidya":"Samanya","practical_application":"Helps poets cultivate 'chāyā' (poetic aura) through guṇas and helps critics classify stylistic excellence into general vs particular.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Definition","entry_title":"Chāyā of Poetry: Sāmānya and Vaiśeṣika","lookup_keywords":["chāyā","kāvya-guṇa","sāmānya","vaiśeṣika","kavi"],"quick_summary":"A strong poetic chāyā arises from guṇas; it is classified into a general aura shared across good poetry and a particular aura unique to a specific style/poet."}
Concept: Excellence manifests as an emergent 'shade' or aura produced by multiple guṇas; universals and particulars both operate in aesthetics.
Application: When revising, aim for baseline sāmānya-chāyā (clarity, grace) and then cultivate a distinctive vaiśeṣika-chāyā (signature diction/texture).
Khanda Section: Sahitya-shastra (Kavya & Alamkara)
Primary Rasa: Adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: Shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A poet presents a manuscript glowing with a subtle 'aura' (chāyā); Agni explains two halos—one common soft radiance and one distinctive patterned radiance—symbolizing sāmānya and vaiśeṣika.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural, Agni instructing, a manuscript emitting two layered glows (soft common halo and patterned unique halo), stylized flames and lotus motifs, earthy reds and yellows","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting, gold-leaf halos illustrating two kinds of chāyā around a palm-leaf manuscript, Agni as guru, ornate jewelry and embossed gold textures","mysore_prompt":"Mysore style, subtle gradations to show two auras, poet and students in a learning hall, fine detailing of manuscript and gestures","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, literary workshop scene, illuminated manuscript with two distinct decorative borders representing chāyā types, precise linework and pastel palette"}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: Resolved: छायामनुगृह्णात्यसौ→छायाम् अनुगृह्णाति असौ; सम्भवत्येष→सम्भवति एषः.
Related Themes: Agni Purana: guṇa definitions (immediately following verses); Agni Purana: earlier alaṅkāra taxonomy that supports chāyā formation
It imparts kāvya-śāstra (Sanskrit poetics): ‘chāyā’—a refined poetic aura produced by guṇas—is classified into two technical types, sāmānya (general) and vaiśeṣika (distinctive).
By codifying a taxonomy of literary aesthetics (chāyā and its types), the Agni Purana functions not only as a religious text but also as a compendium of technical disciplines such as poetics and rhetorical theory.
While not a ritual injunction, it frames refined speech and well-formed poetry as a disciplined śāstra; in the Purāṇic worldview, cultivated, truthful, and aesthetically ordered expression supports dharma and the uplifting (puṇya-oriented) use of language.