Adhyaya 18 — Arjuna Declines the Throne; Garga Directs Him to Dattatreya; The Gods Defeat the Daityas through Dattatreya’s Vision and the Movement of Lakshmi
दत्तात्रेय उवाच
सत्यमेतत् सुरा विद्या ममाऽस्ति समदर्शिनः ।
अस्याऽस्तु योषितः सङ्गादहमुच्छिष्टतां गतः ॥
dattātreya uvāca
satyam etat surā vidyā mamāsti samadarśinaḥ |
asyāstu yoṣitaḥ saṅgād aham ucchiṣṭatāṃ gataḥ ||
દત્તાત્રેયે કહ્યું—હે દેવો, આ સત્ય છે; જ્ઞાન મારું છે અને હું સમદર્શી છું. છતાં આ સ્ત્રીના સંગથી હું ‘ઉચ્છિષ્ટ’ કહેવાતી સ્થિતિને પ્રાપ્ત થયો છું.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "vicara (reflective tone)", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Even with insight, habitual association and attachment can create downfall in terms of conduct and reputation. The narrative uses ‘saṅga’ to show how the mind’s clinging—not mere knowledge-claims—determines freedom.
A moral-psychological instruction embedded in Ākhyāna; not part of the five formal purāṇic markers except as ancillary dharma teaching.
‘Samadarśin’ indicates non-dual vision, yet the verse dramatizes the difference between realization and the residual momentum (vāsanā) that can still manifest as socially ‘defiling’ behavior.