The Sumanā Narrative: Vaiṣṇava Hospitality, Āṣāḍha Śukla Ekādaśī, and the Rise to Brāhmaṇahood
पुत्रलोभं परित्यज्य स्नेहं त्यक्त्वा प्रदूरतः । अपुत्रवान्भवाञ्जातस्तस्य पापस्य वै फलम्
putralobhaṃ parityajya snehaṃ tyaktvā pradūrataḥ | aputravānbhavāñjātastasya pāpasya vai phalam
Dengan meninggalkan ketamakan akan anak lelaki dan menanggalkan kasih sayang dari kejauhan, engkau menjadi tidak beranak—itulah benar-benar buah dosa itu.
Unspecified (context-dependent within Bhūmi-khaṇḍa 18)
Concept: Attachment-driven craving (putra-lobha) binds; relinquishing obsessive affection is a step toward inner freedom, yet karmic results may still manifest as childlessness.
Application: Practice non-attachment in family roles; serve dependents without possessiveness; redirect longing into devotional service and community care; accept outcomes while refining conduct.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A solitary brāhmaṇa sits beneath a neem tree outside his home, prayer beads in hand, gazing calmly at an empty courtyard where children’s laughter is absent. The teacher-sage stands nearby, palm raised in instruction, while a soft, unseen presence of Viṣṇu is suggested by a gentle radiance from a small śālagrāma on a cloth.","primary_figures":["brāhmaṇa householder","sage/teacher","subtle presence of Viṣṇu (radiance/śālagrāma)"],"setting":"quiet village edge with neem tree, simple home, small worship cloth with śālagrāma","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["soft saffron","leaf green","stone grey","sky blue","warm gold"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: contemplative courtyard scene—brāhmaṇa with japa-mālā seated under a stylized tree, sage instructing; śālagrāma on a cloth emitting gold leaf radiance; rich vermilion and emerald garments, ornate borders, devotional stillness with gold highlights.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: serene dawn with delicate foliage; brāhmaṇa seated in quiet acceptance, sage beside him; subtle glow around a small śālagrāma; cool blues and fresh greens, refined faces, lyrical emptiness of the courtyard conveying childlessness without harshness.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines—teacher and disciple under a large stylized tree; śālagrāma with halo; warm yellow background, red-green costume blocks, meditative symmetry and moral clarity.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central seated figure framed by lotus vines; a small Viṣṇu symbol (śālagrāma) on a decorated cloth; peacocks perched on border; deep blue field with gold floral filigree, mood of quiet surrender."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"serene","sound_elements":["morning birds","gentle tanpura","soft bell at cadence","light breeze"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: अपुत्रवान्भवाञ्जातः = अपुत्रवान् + भवान् + जातः (न् + भ → न्भ; न् + ज → ञ्ज).
It teaches that harmful or sinful conduct yields karmic consequences, here framed as the loss of progeny, and it critiques excessive attachment or craving (lobha) for a son.
It presents detachment as a described outcome (“having cast off affection”), but the moral thrust is karmic causality: actions and intentions (such as greedy craving) can lead to painful results.
In Purāṇic ethics, progeny is often treated as a social-religious good; the verse uses childlessness as a narrative marker of misdeed’s “fruit” (phala), underscoring moral accountability.