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Varaha Purana 22.5 — Adhyaya 22, Shloka 5

Gaurī’s Rebirth, Umā’s Austerities, Rudra’s Test, and the Himalayan Wedding

तत्र कालेन महता क्षपयन्ती कलेवरम् । स्वशरीराग्निना दग्धा ततः शैलसुता अभवत् ॥ २२.५ ॥

tatra kālena mahatā kṣapayantī kalevaram | svaśarīrāgninā dagdhā tataḥ śailasutā ’bhavat || 22.5 ||

There, after a long passage of time, wearing away her bodily frame, she was consumed by the fire of her own body; thereafter she became the Daughter of the Mountain.

तत्रthere
तत्र:
Adhikarana (अधिकरण/स्थान)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootतत्र (अव्यय)
Formदेशवाचक-अव्यय (adverb of place)
कालेनwith time / over time
कालेन:
Karana (करण)
TypeNoun
Rootकाल (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, तृतीया (3rd/Instrumental), एकवचन
महताgreat (long)
महता:
Karana (करण)
TypeAdjective
Rootमहत् (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, तृतीया (3rd/Instrumental), एकवचन; विशेषणम् (कालेन)
क्षपयन्तीwearing away / emaciating
क्षपयन्ती:
Karta (कर्ता)
TypeVerb
Rootक्षप् (धातु)
Formवर्तमानकृदन्त (शतृ/Present active participle), स्त्रीलिङ्ग, प्रथमा (1st/Nominative), एकवचन; परस्मैपदी-कर्तरि
कलेवरम्the body
कलेवरम्:
Karma (कर्म)
TypeNoun
Rootकलेवर (प्रातिपदिक)
Formनपुंसकलिङ्ग, द्वितीया (2nd/Accusative), एकवचन
स्वशरीराग्निनाby the fire of her own body
स्वशरीराग्निना:
Karana (करण)
TypeNoun
Rootस्व (प्रातिपदिक) + शरीर (प्रातिपदिक) + अग्नि (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, तृतीया (3rd/Instrumental), एकवचन; षष्ठी-तत्पुरुषः (स्वस्य शरीरस्य अग्निः)
दग्धाburnt
दग्धा:
Kriya (क्रिया/भाव)
TypeVerb
Rootदह् (धातु)
Formभूतकृदन्त (क्त/Past passive participle), स्त्रीलिङ्ग, प्रथमा (1st/Nominative), एकवचन
ततःthen / thereafter
ततः:
Kriya-visheshana (क्रियाविशेषण)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootततः (अव्यय)
Formक्रम/हेतुवाचक-अव्यय (adverb: then/thereafter)
शैलसुताdaughter of the mountain
शैलसुता:
Karta (कर्ता)
TypeNoun
Rootशैल (प्रातिपदिक) + सुता (प्रातिपदिक)
Formस्त्रीलिङ्ग, प्रथमा (1st/Nominative), एकवचन; षष्ठी-तत्पुरुषः (शैलस्य सुता)
अभवत्became
अभवत्:
Kriya (क्रिया)
TypeVerb
Rootभू (धातु)
Formलङ् (Imperfect/Past/लङ्), प्रथमपुरुष (3rd), एकवचन; परस्मैपदम्

Varāha (default dialogue framework; speaker not explicit in excerpt)

Varaha Avatara Context: {"is_varaha_focus":false,"aspect_highlighted":"None","boar_form_detail":"None","earth_interaction":"None"}

Bhu Devi Dialogue: {"is_dialogue":false,"speaker_role":"None","bhu_devi_state":"None","key_question":"None"}

Mathura Mandala: {"is_mathura_related":false,"specific_site":"None","parikrama_context":"None","krishna_connection":"None"}

Dharma Shastra: {"has_dharma_rule":true,"topic":"prayaschitta","instruction_summary":"Extreme tapas ‘burns’ embodied limitation—self-discipline is portrayed as an inner fire that consumes impurity and enables renewal.","karmic_consequence":"Sustained discipline yields purification and a higher rebirth/state; indulgence preserves the old karmic pattern and suffering."}

Vrata Mahatmya: {"has_vrata":false,"vrata_name":"None","tithi_month":"None","promised_fruit":"None"}

Cosmic Boar Symbolism: {"has_symbolism":true,"symbolic_interpretation":"The ‘fire of one’s own body’ mirrors tapas as yajña: the practitioner becomes altar and oblation, converting mortality into transformation.","yajna_varaha_imagery":"Inner-agni consuming the body parallels sacrificial agni consuming offerings; the result is a ‘new embodiment’ (rebirth as Śailasutā).","vedantic_connection":"Body is transient upādhi; through disciplined heat (tapas), identity shifts from deha-buddhi toward a dharmic, higher manifestation."}

Philosophical Teaching: {"has_teaching":true,"teaching_type":"impermanence and renewal","core_concept":"Long time and disciplined effort can exhaust an old ‘body’ (pattern of being) and generate a renewed identity aligned with dharma.","practical_application":"Commit to long-horizon practice; let disciplined habits ‘burn away’ harmful tendencies until a new stable character emerges."}

Subject Matter: ["Mythic genealogy","Transformation","Embodiment and mortality","Sacred geography (mountain lineage motif)"]

Primary Rasa: adbhuta

Secondary Rasa: shanta

Type: mountain hermitage zone

Related Themes: Varāha Purāṇa 22.22.6 (naming and new form)

Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A long tapas scene culminating in a luminous inner fire consuming the ascetic’s worn body, transitioning into the emergence of Śailasutā (daughter of the mountain).","item_prompts":["meditating ascetic","aura of inner flames (not external pyre)","withered frame indicating time","mountain backdrop","transition motif: old form dissolving, new form arising"],"kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural: controlled stylized flames as aura, strong outlines, mountain greens and ochres, metamorphosis shown in two-register narrative.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore: gold-leaf flames as divine radiance, embossed ornaments on the reborn form, mountain throne-like setting.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore: subtle gradations for fire-aura, elegant transformation, emphasis on spiritual luminosity over violence.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari: delicate flame-halo, poetic metamorphosis, mountain scenery with soft colors, narrative split-panel feel."}

Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"mystical, intense","suggested_raga":"Darbari Kanada","pace":"slow","voice_tone":"deep, resonant, awe-tinged"}

C
Classical Literature
P
Purāṇic Narrative
V
Vaishnavism
S
Sanskrit Philology

FAQs

It illustrates a common Purāṇic narrative technique: linking transformation and rebirth-like change to genealogical identities (here, becoming Śailasutā), reflecting how early Sanskrit texts encode cultural memory through mythic lineage.

No specific place-name is given in this verse; however, the epithet “Śailasutā” (“Daughter of the Mountain”) invokes a mountain-associated identity rather than a uniquely identifiable historical site.

The verse primarily conveys a philosophical observation about corporeality and change—bodies are subject to time and dissolution—rather than an explicit moral injunction.

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