Rudra’s Wrath at Daksha’s Sacrifice and the Iconography of Kālarūpa through the Zodiac
स्त्रीपुंसयोः समं रूपं शय्यासनपरिग्रहः वीणावाद्यधृङ् मिथुनं गीतनर्तकशिल्पिषु
strīpuṃsayoḥ samaṃ rūpaṃ śayyāsanaparigrahaḥ vīṇāvādyadhṛṅ mithunaṃ gītanartakaśilpiṣu
ミトゥナ(双子宮)においては、女と男の姿形は等しい。(彼らは)寝台と座具(家内の調度)を有する者である。ミトゥナは、歌い手・舞い手・工芸の者たちの中で、ヴィーナー(vīṇā)および他の楽器を携える姿として描かれる。
{ "primaryRasa": "shringara", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The verse presents complementarity rather than hierarchy: male and female are portrayed as ‘equal in form’ within the Mithuna symbolism, and the household (bed/seat) and arts (music, dance, craft) are treated as culturally elevating, not merely worldly.
This is cosmological/astral characterization (sarga-type descriptive material). It does not narrate dynasties or manvantaras but supplies a world-order taxonomy through rāśi attributes.
Mithuna signifies duality-in-unity: paired forces (woman/man), domestic stability (furnishings), and refined expression (vīṇā, song, dance). In Purāṇic symbolism, such pairing can also hint at harmony of opposites and the generative principle underlying society.