The Sumanā Episode: Suvrata’s Childhood Devotion and All-Activity Remembrance of Hari
योगींद्र मानससरोवरराजहंसं शुद्धं प्रभावमखिलं सततं हि यस्य । तस्यैव पादयुगलं विमलं विशालं दीनस्य मेऽसुररिपो कुरु तस्य रक्षाम्
yogīṃdra mānasasarovararājahaṃsaṃ śuddhaṃ prabhāvamakhilaṃ satataṃ hi yasya | tasyaiva pādayugalaṃ vimalaṃ viśālaṃ dīnasya me'suraripo kuru tasya rakṣām
Wahai Indra dalam kalangan para yogin—laksana angsa diraja di Mānasarovara—yang seluruh sinar kemuliaan-Nya, sentiasa hadir, adalah suci; wahai musuh para asura, lindungilah aku yang hina ini dengan memelihara sepasang kaki-Nya yang nirmala dan luas.
A devotee (supplicant voice within the narrative; direct address in prayer)
Concept: The helpless devotee seeks rakṣā through the Lord’s spotless, expansive feet; the Lord is the pure radiance moving in yogic consciousness.
Application: When anxious, shift from self-reliance to ‘pāda-āśraya’: a short prayer for protection, followed by a few minutes of breath-centered meditation imagining the mind as a clear lake.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: river
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A crystal-clear lake like Mānasarovara mirrors snowy peaks; upon its surface glides a luminous royal swan symbolizing the Lord’s presence in the yogic mind. In the foreground, a trembling devotee reaches toward Vishnu’s vast lotus feet, which descend like a protective canopy, washing the scene in pure light.","primary_figures":["Vishnu (as asura-ripu, yogīndra)","a helpless devotee","symbolic royal swan (haṃsa)"],"setting":"Himalayan lakeshore with snow mountains, prayer flags faintly implied, and a visionary descent of the Lord’s feet into the landscape.","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["glacial turquoise","snow white","sunrise gold","lotus pink","deep sapphire"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Vishnu’s lotus feet enlarged and central with gold-leaf embossing, anklets and toe-rings gemmed; Mānasarovara rendered as patterned turquoise bands; a white royal swan with gold accents; devotee kneeling in sorrowful añjali; ornate arch and rich red-green borders.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: delicate Himalayan landscape, pale turquoise lake with a graceful swan; Vishnu’s presence suggested by luminous lotus feet descending from a soft cloud; devotee small and expressive, refined facial features, cool palette with warm dawn highlights.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: stylized lake and mountains as rhythmic shapes; bold-outlined swan; Vishnu’s feet and aura in strong yellow-red halo; devotee in simple lines, emphasis on protective gesture and purity symbolism.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: lotus feet framed by dense lotus and vine borders; swan motif repeated in decorative panels; lake suggested through patterned blue fields; gold and white detailing, devotional symmetry, emphasis on pāda-śaraṇāgati."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["wind over water","single bell strikes","soft conch","distant birds"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: Resolved: योगीन्द्र (योगिन्+इन्द्र); मानससरोवरराजहंसम् (समास); मेऽसुररिपो = मे + असुररिपो.
“Asuraripo” means “enemy of the asuras,” an epithet commonly used for the divine protector—most typically Viṣṇu—invoked here as the one who grants refuge and protection.
The rājahaṃsa on Mānasarovara is a classical image for spiritual purity and discernment; it intensifies the stuti by portraying the deity/ideal yogin as perfectly pure, luminous, and untouched by impurity.
It expresses śaraṇāgati (surrender): the speaker calls themselves “dīna” (helpless) and seeks protection specifically through the refuge of the deity’s “pādā-yugala” (lotus-feet), a central motif in bhakti devotion.