Right Conduct, Offenses Against Brāhmaṇas, Truthfulness, and the Greatness of the Cow
Go-Māhātmya
विशिष्टं सर्वद्रव्येषु गव्यमिष्टं परं शुभम् । यस्यास्ये भोजनं नास्ति तस्य मूर्तिस्तु पूतिका
viśiṣṭaṃ sarvadravyeṣu gavyamiṣṭaṃ paraṃ śubham | yasyāsye bhojanaṃ nāsti tasya mūrtistu pūtikā
Antara segala bahan, yang berasal daripada lembu dianggap paling istimewa, paling diingini dan paling membawa keberkatan. Namun sesiapa yang tiada makanan di mulutnya—jasadnya sendiri hanyalah bau busuk.
Unspecified (context-dependent within Adhyaya 48 narrative)
Concept: Cow-derived substances are declared supremely auspicious; neglect of proper nourishment/consumption is condemned through a stark image of impurity and decay.
Application: Avoid self-neglect and tamasic habits; keep diet and conduct clean and purposeful; interpret the ‘stench’ metaphor as a call to inner purification and dignified living.
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A split-scene moral allegory: on one side, luminous vessels of milk, curd, and ghee glow like sacred treasures; on the other, a shadowed figure with an empty mouth and hollow eyes is surrounded by a faint smoky haze symbolizing ‘pūtikā’ (stench). The composition feels like a Purāṇic warning mural—beauty of śubha contrasted with the ugliness of neglect.","primary_figures":["Symbolic dhārmika figure honoring gavyas","Symbolic neglected figure (allegorical)","Sacred cow (as auspicious source)"],"setting":"Didactic temple corridor wall or a moral tableau in a courtyard; offerings arranged on a low altar; the warning side recedes into darkness.","lighting_mood":"dramatic chiaroscuro","color_palette":["butter gold","ivory","ash gray","deep maroon","midnight blue"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: allegorical diptych with gold-leaf brilliance on the auspicious side—ornate vessels of milk, curd, ghee and a serene cow—contrasted with a darkened side showing a gaunt figure amid smoky gray tones; heavy gold embellishment on the śubha elements, rich reds/greens, temple-arch framing and lotus borders.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: refined moral contrast—left side a gentle pastoral offering scene with cool natural palette and warm highlights; right side a subdued shadowed figure with minimal background wash suggesting foulness; delicate brushwork, restrained symbolism, lyrical yet admonitory mood.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlined didactic panel with two zones—bright red-yellow-green for auspicious gavyas and cow, deep indigo/gray for the ‘pūtikā’ warning; stylized expressions, temple-wall aesthetic, ornamental borders emphasizing moral instruction.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: symbolic composition with central lotus border framing auspicious dairy offerings and a cow, while the lower corner shows a dark cloud motif around an empty-mouthed figure; deep blue ground with gold accents, intricate floral borders, peacocks and cows as auspicious motifs contrasted against a shadowed warning vignette."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"fast-dramatic","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["sharp bell strikes","low drum pulse","brief silence","conch accent"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: mūrtiḥ+tu → mūrtistu; yasya+āsye → yasyāsye (a+a→ā).
“Gavyam” refers to substances derived from the cow—commonly understood in Dharma literature as milk, curd, ghee, and related cow-products—praised here as especially auspicious.
It uses strong imagery to stress the necessity of proper sustenance and purity: without nourishment, the body is depicted as decaying and unpleasant, highlighting the ethical importance of food and maintenance of life.
It elevates auspicious, purity-associated substances (especially cow-derived) while underscoring that life and dignity depend on basic nourishment—implying that providing and consuming proper food is a core dharmic concern.