Graha–Ketu–Utpāta Lakṣaṇas: Solar/Lunar Omens, Comets, Eclipses, and Calendar Rules
मृगाच्छिशिरवसंतश्च ग्रीष्माः स्युश्चोत्तरायणे । वर्षा शरच्च हेमंतः कर्काद्वै दक्षिणायने ॥ १२८ ॥
mṛgācchiśiravasaṃtaśca grīṣmāḥ syuścottarāyaṇe | varṣā śaracca hemaṃtaḥ karkādvai dakṣiṇāyane || 128 ||
Bermula dari Mṛga (Mṛgaśīrṣa), musim-musim—Śiśira (akhir dingin), Vasanta (bunga), dan Grīṣma (panas)—termasuk dalam Uttarāyaṇa, iaitu perjalanan Matahari ke utara. Bermula dari Karka (Kanser), musim-musim—Varṣā (hujan), Śarad (gugur), dan Hemanta (awal dingin)—termasuk dalam Dakṣiṇāyaṇa, iaitu perjalanan Matahari ke selatan.
Narada (in instruction/dialogue context with the Sanatkumara tradition)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It frames kāla (sacred time) through the Sun’s two courses—Uttarāyaṇa and Dakṣiṇāyaṇa—so that dharma, vows, and spiritual disciplines can be aligned with cosmic order (ṛta).
By clarifying seasonal and solar divisions, it supports disciplined devotion—helping a bhakta choose appropriate times for vrata, japa, and worship, thereby making practice steady and rule-based rather than random.
Jyotiṣa Vedāṅga (Vedic astronomy/astrology): the verse maps seasons to the Sun’s northward and southward movement, a key tool for calendrical calculation and ritual timing.