Sati’s Death and the Assault on Daksha’s Sacrifice: Virabhadra versus the Devas
आदित्याद्यास्त्रिलोकेश समं शक्रादिभिः सुरैः मातृष्वसा विपन्नेयमन्तर्दुःखेन दह्यती
ādityādyāstrilokeśa samaṃ śakrādibhiḥ suraiḥ mātṛṣvasā vipanneyamantarduḥkhena dahyatī
હે ત્રિલોકેશ! આદિત્યાદિ દેવો ઇન્દ્રાદિ સૂરებთან અહીં હાજર છે; છતાં આ માતૃસ્વસા (માસી) વિપન્ન છે, આંતરિક દુઃખથી દહે છે।
{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
External grandeur—assemblies of devas and ritual pomp—cannot resolve inner adharma or emotional injury; Purāṇic ethics repeatedly privilege inner truth (antar-bhāva) over mere public validation.
Again, episodic sacred history (carita) rather than sarga/pratisarga; it supports dharma-teaching through exemplary narrative about the consequences of ritual pride and relational harm.
‘Burning with inner sorrow’ prefigures Rudra’s outward fire-like rage: the feminine interior pain becomes the narrative seed for cosmic-ritual disruption, showing psyche and cosmos mirrored in Purāṇic storytelling.