Daksha’s Sacrifice and the Origin of Kapalin Rudra (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)
धनुष्पाणिर्महाबाहुर्बाणशक्तिधरो ऽव्ययः चतुर्भुजो महातूणी आदित्यसमदर्शनः
dhanuṣpāṇirmahābāhurbāṇaśaktidharo 'vyayaḥ caturbhujo mahātūṇī ādityasamadarśanaḥ
Dengan busur di tangan, berlengan perkasa, memegang anak panah dan lembing, tidak pernah susut; bertangan empat, memiliki tabung panah yang besar, dan berwajah laksana Matahari.
{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Power is depicted as structured and purposeful: weapons, multiple arms, and ‘unfailing’ nature indicate capability directed toward a task, not chaos. The sun-like radiance (āditya) evokes clarity and the dispelling of disorder.
Primarily episodic narration (Vamśānucarita-style) with a sarga-like descriptive insert: it details the form and attributes of a being produced for cosmic enforcement.
Four arms and solar appearance are conventional markers of superhuman authority, bridging human-like ‘puruṣa’ language with divine iconography. The great quiver and multiple weapons suggest inexhaustible readiness—an archetype of dharma’s protective force manifesting in the world.