The Rise of Soma-vaṁśa: Budha’s Birth and Purūravā–Urvaśī; The Origin of Karma-kāṇḍa in Tretā-yuga
रममाणस्तया देव्या पद्मकिञ्जल्कगन्धया । तन्मुखामोदमुषितो मुमुदेऽहर्गणान् बहून् ॥ २५ ॥
ramamāṇas tayā devyā padma-kiñjalka-gandhayā tan-mukhāmoda-muṣito mumude ’har-gaṇān bahūn
ຮ່າງກາຍຂອງອຸຣະວະສີຫອມດັ່ງຝຸ່ນກະສອນຂອງດອກບົວ. ປຸຣູຣະວາຜູ້ຖືກປຸກໃຈໂດຍກິ່ນຫອມຈາກໃບໜ້າແລະເຮືອນກາຍຂອງນາງ ໄດ້ຊື່ນຊົມຢູ່ກັບນາງຫຼາຍມື້ດ້ວຍຄວາມປິຕິຍິນດີຢ່າງຫຼາຍ.
This verse shows how attraction to beauty and sensual charm can “steal” one’s self-mastery, making a person absorbed in enjoyment for long periods and delaying higher spiritual focus.
In the narrative of Purūravas and Urvaśī, Śukadeva highlights how a powerful king can still become overpowered by desire, illustrating the binding force of kāma when one associates intimately with sense objects.
Guard the mind from constant stimulation and idealization of beauty; cultivate disciplined habits, sādhana, and purposeful relationships so attraction does not erode clarity, duty, and devotion.