Rudra’s Wrath at Daksha’s Sacrifice and the Iconography of Kālarūpa through the Zodiac
व्रीहिप्रदीपिककरा मनावारूढा च कन्यका चरते स्त्रीरतिस्थाने वसते नड्वलेषु च
vrīhipradīpikakarā manāvārūḍhā ca kanyakā carate strīratisthāne vasate naḍvaleṣu ca
അരി-ദീപിക കൈയിൽ പിടിച്ച്, ‘മനാ’യിൽ ആരൂഢയായ കന്യക സഞ്ചരിക്കുന്നു; അവൾ സ്ത്രീകളുടെ രതി-സ്ഥാനങ്ങളിൽ വസിക്കുകയും, നാണൽക്കാടുകളിലും താമസിക്കുകയും ചെയ്യുന്നു.
{ "primaryRasa": "shringara", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
In tīrtha sections, such motifs often function as cautionary or identificatory markers: certain zones are characterized by secrecy and sensuality (rati-sthāna, reed-beds), reminding practitioners to maintain discernment and self-restraint while navigating the landscape.
This is best treated as kṣetra-varṇana / tīrtha-māhātmya descriptive material rather than one of the five lakṣaṇas; it resembles local legend-encoding within pilgrimage geography.
A lamp (pradīpikā) in erotic/hidden locales can symbolize the tension between illumination (awareness) and concealment (reed-beds, secret trysts), a common purāṇic way of marking morally ambiguous or liminal spaces within a sacred region.