Hymn of Victory: Varāha, the Slaying of Hiraṇyākṣa, and the Praise of Viṣṇu
मुष्टिना प्राहरद्देवं दक्षिणे तु भुजे प्रभोः । एवं युद्धं महाघोरं सव्यासव्यं गतागतम्
muṣṭinā prāharaddevaṃ dakṣiṇe tu bhuje prabhoḥ | evaṃ yuddhaṃ mahāghoraṃ savyāsavyaṃ gatāgatam
Dengan penumbuknya dia memukul sang dewa pada lengan kanan Sang Prabhu. Maka pertempuran menjadi amat mengerikan—berombak maju mundur, bertukar-tukar pukulan kiri dan kanan silih berganti.
Narrator (context not specified in the provided excerpt; likely within the Pulastya–Bhīṣma dialogue frame of the Sṛṣṭi-khaṇḍa)
Concept: Even the divine līlā can appear terrifying; conflict intensifies through alternating advantage, yet the Lord remains the axis around which chaos turns.
Application: In volatile situations, recognize the ‘back-and-forth’ nature of struggle; do not conclude from a single blow—maintain perseverance and perspective.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Hiraṇyākṣa closes in and drives a crushing fist into the Lord’s right arm, the impact rippling through the air like thunder. The duel becomes a terrifying dance—left and right, advance and retreat—each movement mirrored, each opening instantly answered.","primary_figures":["Varāha (Vishnu)","Hiraṇyākṣa"],"setting":"Rock-strewn battlefield with swirling dust and sea-spray; the horizon blurred by motion and force.","lighting_mood":"darkened sky with intermittent divine glow","color_palette":["charcoal black","bronze","deep teal","pale lightning-white","ruby red"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: close-quarters combat—Hiraṇyākṣa’s clenched fist striking Varāha’s right arm; heavy gold-leaf halos and ornamentation, embossed highlights on armor, rich reds/greens, dynamic diagonal poses within ornate temple borders.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: refined depiction of the fist-strike moment with subtle expressions; cool, muted battlefield tones, delicate dust clouds, rhythmic alternation suggested by repeated stance echoes, lyrical landscape framing the duel.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines emphasizing muscular arms and stylized faces; patterned armor, strong red-yellow-green palette, motion conveyed through curved lines and repeated limb positions like a narrative panel sequence.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: devotional combat framed by intricate floral borders; central Varāha figure with lotus motifs, the asura’s fist rendered with stylized force lines, deep blue ground with gold accents and symmetrical ornamentation."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Shankara","pace":"fast-dramatic","voice_tone":"emotional","sound_elements":["thunder-like drum","hand-clap impact","wind gusts","conch echo"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: prāharad + devam → prāharaddevaṃ; savya + asavyam → savyāsavyaṃ; gata + āgatam → gatāgatam
It describes a fierce exchange in battle: one combatant strikes the divine opponent on the Lord’s right arm with a fist, and the fight continues with alternating left-and-right blows, moving back and forth.
It compresses the rhythm of combat—alternating left and right strikes (savyāsavyam) and the ebb-and-flow of engagement (gatāgatam), suggesting a relentless, seesawing duel.
Purāṇic battle scenes often highlight the intensity of conflict as a prelude to dharmic resolution—power and aggression are shown vividly, but the broader narrative typically reorients the listener toward rightful order (dharma) and the consequences of enmity.