The Greatness of Hari’s Janmāṣṭamī (Jayantī) Vow
गंधपुष्पं तथा द्रव्यं कुंकुमादिमनोहरम् । अन्नं बहुगुणं दृष्ट्वा भोक्तुं तन्मानसंकुलम्
gaṃdhapuṣpaṃ tathā dravyaṃ kuṃkumādimanoharam | annaṃ bahuguṇaṃ dṛṣṭvā bhoktuṃ tanmānasaṃkulam
ເມື່ອເຫັນດອກໄມ້ຫອມ ແລະວັດຖຸນານາອັນນ່າຊົມ ເຊັ່ນ ກຸງກຸມ ເປັນຕົ້ນ ພ້ອມທັງເຫັນອາຫານທີ່ຈັດເຮັດດ້ວຍຄຸນຄ່າຫຼາຍປະການ ໃຈຂອງເຂົາກໍວຸ້ນວາຍດ້ວຍຄວາມປາຖະໜາຈະກິນ
Unspecified (narrative voice; speaker not identifiable from the single verse alone)
Concept: The mind is stirred by sense-objects; vrata is the art of not letting desire hijack sacred intention.
Application: When tempted, pause and reframe: ‘This is offered to the Divine’; use breath and mantra to let the wave pass before acting.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Type: river
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A spread of ritual offerings glows with color: saffron, sandal paste, garlands, and richly prepared food steaming in bronze vessels. A hungry man’s gaze fixes on the naivedya; his face shows a storm of longing and shame as incense smoke curls like the very shape of desire.","primary_figures":["Hungry king/protagonist","Women/attendants near offerings (contextual)"],"setting":"Ritual platform at a river ghat; trays of kumkuma, flowers, and naivedya arranged before a small shrine or lamp cluster.","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["saffron orange","kumkuma red","brass gold","jasmine white","smoke gray"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: close-up devotional still-life of naivedya and pūjā items—gold leaf on brass vessels and lamp flames; the king’s expressive face at the edge of the frame, eyes drawn to food; rich reds/greens, ornate textiles, jeweled containers; incense smoke rendered as stylized curls.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: refined depiction of offerings with delicate textures—flower petals, saffron powder, steaming rice; the protagonist’s subtle, conflicted expression; soft background of Yamunā steps; cool shadows with warm highlights on brassware.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines emphasize the sensory objects—flowers, kumkuma, food—arranged in rhythmic patterns; the protagonist shown with enlarged expressive eyes and tense posture; warm reds/yellows dominate, smoke motifs stylized like temple ornamentation.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: ornate offering tableau framed by lotus borders; repeated floral motifs; deep blue ground with gold accents; naivedya vessels patterned; a small narrative figure reaching mentally (not physically) toward the food, conveying temptation through gesture and gaze."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Desh","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"emotional","sound_elements":["stomach rumble (subtle)","incense crackle","murmured mantras","river lapping","sudden hush"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: गंधपुष्पं = गन्ध + पुष्पम्; कुंकुमादिमनोहरम् = कुङ्कुमादि + मनोहरम्; तन्मानसंकुलम् = तत् + मानस + आकुलम्
It depicts how sensory attractions (fragrance, pleasing substances, and delicious food) can stir the mind into craving, illustrating the mind’s vulnerability to sense-objects.
Yes. Items like fragrant flowers and saffron commonly appear among pūjā materials and offerings; the verse shows how such attractive objects can also trigger personal desire if one is not mindful.
The implied lesson is self-restraint: one should observe how desire arises upon seeing tempting objects and cultivate steadiness of mind rather than being driven by impulse.