Yayāti’s Summons to Heaven and the Teaching on Old Age, the Five-Element Body, and Self–Body Discernment
पुत्रे राज्यं विसृज्यैव कृत्वा चांतेष्टिमुत्तमाम् । इलो राजा महातेजा वसते नहुषात्मज
putre rājyaṃ visṛjyaiva kṛtvā cāṃteṣṭimuttamām | ilo rājā mahātejā vasate nahuṣātmaja
पुत्राकडे राज्य सोपवून आणि उत्तम अंत्येष्टी करून, नहुषपुत्र महातेजस्वी राजा इल तेथे वास करू लागला.
Narrator (Purāṇic narrator in Bhūmi-khaṇḍa context; specific dialogue pair not explicit from single verse)
Concept: Right succession and proper funeral rites stabilize both kingdom and lineage; honoring the departed is a pillar of dharma.
Application: Prepare responsibly for transitions—hand over duties cleanly, honor elders, and treat end-of-life rites with reverence and simplicity.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A luminous king, Ila, solemnly places the royal insignia into his son’s hands, the court watching with hushed respect. Nearby, sacred fires and ritual vessels indicate the completion of excellent funeral rites, while the king’s face shows both grief and serene acceptance of impermanence.","primary_figures":["King Ila (Nahūṣa’s son)","Ila’s son (heir)","family priests (ṛtvij)","mourning courtiers"],"setting":"Palace courtyard transitioning toward a ritual ground: sacred fire altar, kusa grass, water pot, and white cloths; banners lowered in mourning","lighting_mood":"forest dappled","color_palette":["ash gray","saffron","warm gold","white sandalwood","deep brown"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: King Ila transferring the crown and scepter to his son; gold leaf on regalia and ritual vessels; a sacred fire altar with priests performing concluding rites; rich reds and greens subdued by whites and ash tones, ornate borders, gem-studded ornaments balanced with mourning restraint.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: tender succession scene with delicate expressions; priests and family arranged around a small fire altar; soft earth tones and pale whites, gentle shading conveying grief and calm; refined textiles and understated palace architecture.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines; Ila and heir shown in frontal dignity; stylized fire altar and ritual implements; dominant reds/yellows/greens with ash-white accents, temple-wall composition emphasizing dharmic solemnity.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: a ceremonial courtyard framed by lotus and floral borders; deep blue or maroon ground with gold highlights; the act of handing over the kingdom centered, with ritual fire and vessels rendered as ornate motifs; peacocks muted, emphasizing solemn auspiciousness."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"emotional","sound_elements":["low funeral drum (soft)","crackling sacred fire","murmured mantras","wind through courtyard","long silence at the end"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: विसृज्य + एव → विसृज्यैव (स्वर-संधि); च + अन्तेष्टिम् → चान्तेष्टिम् (स्वर-संधि); अन्तेष्टिम् + उत्तमाम् → अन्तेष्टिमुत्तमाम् (स्वर-संधि); नहुष + आत्मज → नहुषात्मज (समास).
It stresses orderly succession—transferring royal authority to the next generation—and fulfilling obligatory rites (antyeṣṭi), showing that governance and ritual duty are both integral to dharma.
The verse implies the rites were performed properly and completely according to dharma, which is considered spiritually beneficial for the departed and meritorious for the performer.
Responsible leadership includes knowing when to hand over power, honoring family and social obligations through prescribed rites, and then living in accordance with a settled, duty-complete stage of life.