Hymn of Victory: Varāha, the Slaying of Hiraṇyākṣa, and the Praise of Viṣṇu
ब्रह्माद्यनुमतिं प्राप्य चक्रं प्राक्षिपदुल्बणम् । सहस्रसूर्यसंकाशं सहस्रारं महाप्रभम्
brahmādyanumatiṃ prāpya cakraṃ prākṣipadulbaṇam | sahasrasūryasaṃkāśaṃ sahasrāraṃ mahāprabham
Setelah memperoleh perkenan Brahmā dan para dewa yang lain, Baginda melontar cakra yang dahsyat—bersinar seperti seribu matahari, berseribu jejari, dan memancar kemuliaan agung.
Unspecified (narratorial verse within the Adhyaya’s ongoing dialogue context)
Concept: Righteous force is legitimized by alignment with cosmic law and wise counsel; power is most auspicious when exercised with dharmic sanction.
Application: Seek counsel and ethical clarity before using authority; let decisions be 'many-spoked'—considering multiple angles—yet decisive.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Varāha-Viṣṇu, after receiving Brahmā’s nod, releases the Sudarśana chakra into the air. The discus blooms into a wheel of light—thousand-spoked, sun-bright—casting sharp halos across the faces of the watching gods.","primary_figures":["Varāha (Viṣṇu)","Brahmā","Devas"],"setting":"Celestial battlefield threshold with layered clouds; a luminous wheel arcs forward, leaving a trail of fire-like petals.","lighting_mood":"blazing brilliance","color_palette":["solar gold","white-hot silver","cobalt blue","flame orange","shadow violet"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: central Varāha-Viṣṇu hurling Sudarśana; thick gold leaf for the chakra with embossed spokes; Brahmā and devas witnessing; rich red backdrop with green accents; jewel-like highlights on ornaments; dynamic diagonal composition within a temple arch frame.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: elegant diagonal flight of the chakra rendered as a radiant wheel; soft cloud layers; Brahmā’s calm assent; cool blues contrasted with warm gold; delicate linework for the thousand spokes.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: stylized chakra as concentric rings with spoke patterns; bold outlines; Varāha’s posture heroic; devas in profile; dominant yellows and reds with green borders; mural-like flat fields of color.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: chakra motif enlarged like a mandala with lotus-petal geometry; Varāha centered; ornate floral borders; deep blue ground with gold and white highlights; incorporate small conch and lotus motifs around the wheel."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"celebratory","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"fast-dramatic","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["conch shell blast","cymbals","drum rolls","whoosh of wind","resonant temple bell"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: brahmādi + anumatim → brahmādyanumatiṃ; prākṣipat + ulbaṇam → prākṣipadulbaṇam
The imagery conveys overwhelming divine power and irresistible radiance, portraying the cakra as a cosmic, world-ordering weapon rather than an ordinary object.
It signals that the act is sanctioned by the divine assembly—an authorized intervention aligned with dharma and cosmic order, not a personal or arbitrary use of force.
The verse does not explicitly name Sudarśana or Viṣṇu, but the cakra’s iconography (extraordinary radiance and spokes) strongly matches the Purāṇic portrayal of the divine discus commonly associated with Viṣṇu.