Nara-Narayana’s Tapas, Indra’s Temptation, and the Burning of Kama: The Origin of Ananga and the Shiva-Linga Episode
हर उवाच यस्मात्त्वया पुत्र सुदुर्धराणि विजृम्भणादीन् प्रतीच्छितानि तस्माद्वरं त्वां प्रतिपूजनाय दास्यामि लोक्य च हास्यकारि
hara uvāca yasmāttvayā putra sudurdharāṇi vijṛmbhaṇādīn pratīcchitāni tasmādvaraṃ tvāṃ pratipūjanāya dāsyāmi lokya ca hāsyakāri
Hara bersabda: “Wahai anak, karena engkau telah menerima derita yang amat sukar, mulai dari vijṛmbhaṇa dan lainnya, maka sebagai anugerah atas pemujaanmu yang layak, akan Kuberikan kepadamu karunia duniawi yang menimbulkan tawa di kalangan manusia.”
{ "primaryRasa": "hasya", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Endurance of hardship undertaken in a devotional or disciplined context is portrayed as meritorious and worthy of divine reciprocation; the deity responds with a boon proportionate to the devotee’s acceptance (pratīcchā) and worship (pratipūjā).
Vamśānucarita/Carita-type material (narrative of boons and their consequences) rather than cosmological Sarga/Pratisarga; it functions as a didactic episode explaining a ritual result and its social effect.
‘Hāsyakāri’ frames a paradoxical boon: what appears as ridicule or comic effect becomes a marked, deity-authored sign (liṅga) of divine favor—suggesting that social perception can be inverted when viewed through a dhārmic lens.