The Burning of Tripura and the Sacred Greatness of Amarakāṇṭaka
Jvāleśvara on the Narmadā
सपत्नीकाश्चैव सुप्ताः संसुप्ता बहवो जनाः । पुत्रमालिंग्यते गाढं दह्यंते त्रिपुरारिणा
sapatnīkāścaiva suptāḥ saṃsuptā bahavo janāḥ | putramāliṃgyate gāḍhaṃ dahyaṃte tripurāriṇā
ഭാര്യകളോടുകൂടെ അനേകർ ഗാഢനിദ്രയിൽ മുങ്ങിക്കിടന്നു; പുത്രനെ കെട്ടിപ്പിടിച്ചിരുന്ന അവരെ ത്രിപുരാരി ശിവൻ ദഹിപ്പിച്ചു।
Unspecified narrator (contextual narration within the Svargakhaṇḍa dialogue tradition)
Concept: Worldly security (even in intimate family embrace) is fragile; adharma invites sudden destruction, urging vigilance and refuge in the divine.
Application: Do not postpone dharma, japa, and charity assuming ‘tomorrow’; cultivate daily remembrance and ethical restraint even amid comfort.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A sleeping city of jeweled palaces floats in a smoky night, couples resting in ornate chambers—one father clutching his child—when a sudden inferno erupts, turning silk canopies and pearl-laden beds into blazing silhouettes. In the distance, Tripurāri’s presence is implied by a cosmic arc of fire and ash, as if the very sky has become a furnace.","primary_figures":["Tripurāri (Śiva)","sleeping citizens of Tripura","a father embracing his son"],"setting":"interior of a jeweled aerial palace within the mythic Tripura-city; collapsing balconies, burning draperies, falling embers","lighting_mood":"fast-rising inferno glow with smoke-choked darkness","color_palette":["ember orange","soot black","molten gold","ash gray","lapis blue"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Tripura’s jeweled palace interior with gold-leaf architecture and gem-like highlights; foreground shows a father tightly embracing his son on an ornate bed as flames curl around pillars; background suggests Tripurāri’s cosmic act through a stylized fiery arc and sacred ash motifs; rich reds, greens, and heavy gold leaf, intricate jewelry, traditional iconographic symmetry.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: lyrical yet tragic night scene of an aerial city; delicate brushwork shows sleeping couples and a child in embrace, with translucent smoke veils and sudden tongues of flame; cool indigo sky contrasts with warm fire; refined faces, patterned textiles, and a distant suggestion of Śiva’s presence as a luminous, minimal silhouette.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines and flat natural pigments; burning palace rendered with rhythmic flame patterns; figures with expressive wide eyes—father and child in tight embrace—surrounded by smoke spirals; Tripurāri hinted in the upper register with ruddy aura and ash-white accents; temple-wall aesthetic in red/yellow/green with deep black smoke.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: narrative panel framed by intricate floral borders; instead of Krishna-centered calm, depict a mythic city consumed by stylized flames and lotus motifs turning to ash; peacocks fleeing, swirling smoke patterns, deep blues and gold; Tripurāri’s fiery arc abstracted like a celestial garland across the top."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"fast-dramatic","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["crackling fire","distant conch shell","temple bells muted by smoke","panicked cries","heavy silence after the blaze"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: सपत्नीकाश्चैव = सपत्नीकाः + च + एव; पुत्रमालिङ्ग्यते = पुत्रम् + आलिङ्ग्यते.
Tripurāri is an epithet of Śiva, meaning “the enemy/destroyer of Tripura,” referring to his destruction of the three cities (Tripura) of the Asuras.
The verse uses sudden destruction during ordinary life (sleeping with family) to stress the fragility of worldly security and the inevitability of divine/karma-driven consequences.
Yes: it cautions against complacency and attachment, implying that one should remain spiritually alert and accountable, since calamity or retribution can arrive unexpectedly.