Sati’s Death and the Assault on Daksha’s Sacrifice: Virabhadra versus the Devas
पुलस्त्य उवाच/ जयायास्तद्वचः श्रुत्वा वज्रपातसमं सती मन्युनाभिप्लुता ब्रह्मन् पञ्चत्वमगमत् ततः
pulastya uvāca/ jayāyāstadvacaḥ śrutvā vajrapātasamaṃ satī manyunābhiplutā brahman pañcatvamagamat tataḥ
ປຸລັດສະຕະຍະ ກ່າວວ່າ: «ເມື່ອໄດ້ຍິນຄໍາຂອງຊະຍາ ດຸດດັ່ງຟ້າຜ່າ, ນາງຜູ້ມີຄຸນທຳນັ້ນ ຖືກຄວາມໂກດຄອບງໍາ, ໂອ ພຣາຫມະນ, ແລ້ວຈຶ່ງເຖິງຄວາມຕາຍ».
{ "primaryRasa": "raudra", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Manyu (wrath) is portrayed as immediately destructive, capable of overturning even ‘satī’ qualities. The ethical lesson is mastery of reactive emotion, especially in contexts of honor, ritual status, and speech.
Vamśānucarita / episodic narration: a moralized story within the puranic dialogue structure rather than cosmological creation or dissolution.
‘Thunderbolt-like words’ depicts speech as karmically potent; verbal injury can function like a weapon. ‘Pañcatva’ emphasizes the body’s return to elements, underscoring impermanence and the high stakes of dharmic restraint.