Viśokā Dvādaśī Vow, Guḍa-Dhenū (Jaggery-Cow) Gift, and Śaila-Dāna (Mountain-Charity) Rites
हव्यकव्येषु यस्माच्च तिला एव हि रक्षणम् । लक्ष्मीं च कुरु शैलेंद्र तिलाचल नमोस्तु ते
havyakavyeṣu yasmācca tilā eva hi rakṣaṇam | lakṣmīṃ ca kuru śaileṃdra tilācala namostu te
神々と祖霊への供物において、胡麻こそまことの護りとなる。山の主よ—ティラーチャラ(Tilācala)よ、福徳を授けたまえ。汝に敬礼する。
Unspecified (verse is a direct praise/prayer to Tilācala within the narrative context of Sṛṣṭikhaṇḍa)
Concept: Ritual substances (tila) become vehicles of rakṣā (protection) when offered with faith; sacred loci can be invoked as bestowers of Lakṣmī (prosperity).
Application: Offer even small acts—sesame charity, śrāddha support, or food-giving—with clean intent; pair material giving with verbal gratitude/prayer for inner and outer prosperity.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: mountain
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A sacred mountain named Tilācala rises like a dark-green altar, its slopes dotted with sesame plants and small yajña-kuṇḍas. At dawn, a devotee offers black sesame into a fire while invoking the mountain-lord to grant Lakṣmī; subtle divine presence is felt as a golden aura crowns the peak.","primary_figures":["Devotee (dāna-kartā)","Tilācala personified as a mountain-deity","Lakṣmī (as blessing-aura or subtle form)"],"setting":"Mountain foothill with a small fire-altar, sesame fields, and a simple shrine-stone; distant pilgrims carrying offering baskets.","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["saffron gold","sesame black","leaf green","vermillion red","smoke gray"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Tilācala as a crowned śailendra-deity above a stylized mountain, devotee offering tila into a yajña fire, Lakṣmī’s golden halo emerging from the peak; heavy gold leaf on the aura, rich crimson and emerald garments, gem-studded ornaments, ornate arch framing the mountain-shrine.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: lyrical Himalayan-like slopes labeled Tilācala, delicate sesame plants, a small homa fire with thin smoke, devotee in simple white cloth; cool greens and soft ochres, refined faces, distant birds and a winding path of pilgrims.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines, Tilācala personified with large expressive eyes and a mountain-crown, Lakṣmī as a radiant presence above, devotee offering sesame; natural pigment palette with dominant reds, yellows, greens; temple-wall compositional symmetry.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central sacred mountain as a lotus-like mound, borders filled with sesame-flower motifs and lotuses, Lakṣmī’s auspicious symbols (śrīvatsa, kalasha) woven into the frame; deep indigo background with gold detailing, devotional offering scene at the base."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"devotional","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"reverent-soft","sound_elements":["temple bells","soft conch shell","crackling fire","morning birds"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: havyakavyeṣu is dvandva (havya+kavya) in locative plural; yasmāt ca → yasmācca; namaḥ astu → namostu (a + a → o).
The verse states that sesame functions as a protective element in both havya (offerings to devas) and kavya (offerings to pitṛs/ancestors), implying ritual purity, safeguarding, and efficacy in sacrificial and śrāddha contexts.
Tilācala is addressed as “śailendra” (lord/king of mountains), suggesting a sacred hill or tīrtha-personified mountain associated with sesame (tila) and invoked for blessings and protection.
It models gratitude and reverence: recognizing sacred means (tila in rites) and offering respectful salutations while seeking Lakṣmī—prosperity understood as a blessed, dharmic outcome rather than mere wealth.