Pitṛ-tīrtha Context: Marks of Sin, Śrāddha Discipline, and Karmic Ripening
in Yayāti’s Narrative
धर्मराजः स्मृतः शास्ता सुघोरैर्विविधैर्वधैः । विनयाचारयुक्तानां प्रमादान्मलिनात्मनाम्
dharmarājaḥ smṛtaḥ śāstā sughorairvividhairvadhaiḥ | vinayācārayuktānāṃ pramādānmalinātmanām
ធម្មរាជ (Dharmarāja) ត្រូវបានចងចាំថាជាអ្នកដាក់វិន័យ; ដោយទណ្ឌកម្មដ៏សាហាវ និងច្រើនប្រភេទ វាប្រែប្រួលកំហុសរបស់អ្នកចិត្តមលិនដែលប្រហែស—ទោះបីខាងក្រៅមានវិន័យ និងអាកប្បកិរិយាល្អក៏ដោយ។
Unspecified in the provided excerpt (narrative voice within Bhūmi-khaṇḍa context)
Concept: Dharmarāja disciplines even those who appear well-behaved externally, when negligence and inner impurity persist; dharma requires inner cleanliness, not only social polish.
Application: Pair outer discipline with inner audit: daily self-review, truthful confession, and corrective vows; avoid complacency born of reputation or ritual performance alone.
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"In a vast, austere hall of judgment, Dharmarāja sits unmoving, his gaze penetrating beyond masks of propriety. Before him stand figures dressed as disciplined ascetics and respectable householders, yet their shadows reveal stains of negligence; instruments of correction hover as symbols of karmic pedagogy rather than mere cruelty.","primary_figures":["Dharmarāja Yama","Chitragupta (optional)","Accused souls with outwardly pious attire"],"setting":"A cosmic courtroom with pillars carved with dharma symbols, scrolls of deeds, and a balance-scale motif; distant flames as reminders of consequence.","lighting_mood":"divine radiance","color_palette":["deep maroon","antique gold","smoke gray","midnight blue","vermillion"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Dharmarāja enthroned with gold leaf halo and embossed ornaments, buffalo emblem near the throne; Chitragupta holding a ledger; souls in saffron/white garments with subtle dark shadow-forms behind them; rich reds and greens, gem-studded jewelry, ornate arch and lotus pedestal, high-contrast sacred courtroom symmetry.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: refined courtroom scene with delicate facial expressions—Yama calm yet severe; ledger and scales rendered with fine detail; cool blues and muted reds; architectural depth with carved pillars; lyrical restraint emphasizing moral clarity.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines, frontal enthroned Yama with characteristic large eyes; patterned background with dharma motifs; strong red-yellow-green pigments; stylized flames and scrolls; temple-wall narrative panel composition.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central enthroned Dharmarāja framed by lotus borders; decorative scales and manuscript motifs in the border; deep indigo ground with gold and vermillion highlights; intricate floral patterns subdued into disciplined geometry to match the theme of correction."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Bhairav","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["low drum","temple bell at intervals","echoing hall ambience","page-turn/scroll rustle (implied)"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: सुघोरैर्विविधैर्वधैः = सुघोरैः + विविधैः + वधैः; प्रमादान्मलिनात्मनाम् = प्रमादात् + मलिनात्मनाम्.
Dharmarāja refers to Yama, the lord of justice, emphasized here as the śāstā—one who chastises and corrects wrongdoing through punishments aligned with moral order (dharma).
The verse warns that negligence and heedlessness can corrupt a person’s life even if they appear disciplined outwardly; accountability under dharma applies to inner purity and attentive conduct, not mere external propriety.
It presents Yama’s punishments as instruments of moral governance, implying that karmic consequences are varied and proportionate, intended to address faults arising from inner impurity and careless lapses.