The Tale of Sukalā: Testing Pativratā Fidelity and the Body-as-House Teaching
एवमुक्त्वा महातेजाः कंदर्पो मुनिदुर्जयः । देवाञ्जेतुं समर्थोऽहं समुनीनृषिसत्तमान्
evamuktvā mahātejāḥ kaṃdarpo munidurjayaḥ | devāñjetuṃ samartho'haṃ samunīnṛṣisattamān
ពេលនិយាយដូច្នោះហើយ កន្ទರ್ಪៈអ្នកមានពន្លឺដ៏ខ្លាំង—មិនអាចឈ្នះបានសូម្បីតែមុនី—បានប្រកាសថា៖ «ឱ ឫសីសត្តម! ខ្ញុំអាចឈ្នះទេវតាទាំងឡាយ ព្រមទាំងមុនីទាំងអស់»។
Kandarpa (Kāma)
Concept: Kāma can overpower even exalted beings when unguarded; therefore self-mastery and devotion are essential safeguards.
Application: Treat desire as powerful and strategic; cultivate disciplines (japa, sat-saṅga, vrata, sense-restraint) so it cannot ‘conquer’ your better judgment.
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Kandarpa stands radiant and dangerous, bow of sugarcane drawn, flower-arrows poised, his smile edged with conquest. Behind him, the air ripples with spring-like fragrance even in a celestial hall, suggesting that desire can invade any sanctuary—deva or sage.","primary_figures":["Kandarpa (Kāma)","Indra (as witness/instigator)","assembled devas","shadowed silhouettes of sages (as implied adversaries)"],"setting":"A threshold between Indra’s court and a vision of hermitages—clouds blending into forest canopies","lighting_mood":"divine radiance","color_palette":["vermilion","spring green","champagne gold","midnight blue","jasmine white"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Kāma as a youthful radiant deity with sugarcane bow and floral arrows, jeweled crown, confident stance; Indra and devas watching; heavy gold leaf on ornaments and halo, rich reds/greens, gem-studded details, dramatic central figure composition.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: Kāma in elegant posture, delicate brushwork on flower-arrows and silk garments; background transitions from celestial clouds to a distant Himalayan hermitage, cool blues and greens, refined faces, lyrical naturalism.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines, Kāma with large expressive eyes and ornate jewelry, sugarcane bow stylized; flat vibrant reds/yellows/greens, temple-wall symmetry, rhythmic floral motifs around the figure.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: Kāma framed by dense lotus and flowering-vine borders, peacocks and bees suggesting spring; deep blue ground with gold highlights; intricate floral patterning, central radiant figure with stylized weaponry."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"fast-dramatic","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["sharp mridangam strokes","conch shell blast","swelling drone","sudden silence after the boast"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: evam + uktvā → evamuktvā; samarthaḥ + aham → samartho'ham (visarga sandhi); devān + jetum → devāñ jetum (n → ñ before j); samunīnṛṣisattamān resolved as sa + munīn + ṛṣi-sattamān (orthographic joining in transmission).
Kandarpa is Kāma, the personified force of desire/love, often portrayed as testing even gods and ascetics through attraction.
It presents Kāma’s boast of power: he claims he can overpower even the devas and the foremost sages—highlighting desire as a formidable force in spiritual narratives.
The verse underscores vigilance and self-mastery: even exalted beings can be challenged by desire, so discipline and discernment are essential on the spiritual path.