The Vision of the Lord Granted to Rukmangada
Prepared to Slay His Son
सकुंडलं चारु शशिप्रकाशं भ्राजिष्णु वक्त्रं तनयस्य भूपः । प्रचिच्छिदे यावदतीव हर्षाद्धैर्यान्वितो रुक्मविभूषणोऽसौ ॥ १७ ॥
sakuṃḍalaṃ cāru śaśiprakāśaṃ bhrājiṣṇu vaktraṃ tanayasya bhūpaḥ | pracicchide yāvadatīva harṣāddhairyānvito rukmavibhūṣaṇo'sau || 17 ||
Raja itu, berhias perhiasan emas dan teguh dalam keberanian, kerana kegembiraan yang meluap-luap hampir memancung wajah puteranya yang berseri, indah laksana cahaya bulan, serta dihiasi subang.
Suta (narrator) describing the episode within the Uttara-Bhaga narration
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
It warns that intense emotion—even joy—can cloud discernment, so dharma requires steadiness (dhairya) and right judgment rather than impulsive action.
Indirectly, it contrasts emotional surge with inner steadiness; bhakti in the Puranic sense is meant to mature into self-controlled devotion guided by dharma, not uncontrolled excitement.
No specific Vedanga (like Vyakarana, Jyotisha, or Kalpa) is taught in this line; the practical takeaway is ethical discipline—governing emotion and acting with dhairya in ritual and life.