Harihara Revelation and the Kurukshetra Tirtha Cycle: Sthanu in Vishnu and the Sanctification of Saptasarasvata
मत्सरित्वं वाग्दुष्टत्वं निष्टुरत्वं तथा परम् टाकित्वं तालवादित्वं नाम्ना वाचाप्यधर्मजम्
matsaritvaṃ vāgduṣṭatvaṃ niṣṭuratvaṃ tathā param ṭākitvaṃ tālavāditvaṃ nāmnā vācāpyadharmajam
Iri hati; pertuturan yang jahat atau berniat buruk; kekasaran (kezaliman kata-kata) dan lebih lagi cercaan menghina; serta tepukan bising dan pertunjukan riuh—semuanya ini, menurut namanya, ialah kecelaan yang lahir daripada adharma, bahkan dalam ucapan.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The list targets social and ritual order: envy and verbal cruelty fracture community, while taunting and disruptive noise-making undermine decorum (especially in assemblies, teaching, or worship). The Purāṇic ethic treats speech as a primary karmic gateway; hence ‘even in speech’ (vācā api) these are adharma’s offspring.
Ṭākitva is best read as taunting/heckling—interjecting insults or derisive remarks. Tālavāditva literally ‘clapping the tāla’ can be neutral in music, but here it functions as boisterous, attention-seeking, or disruptive noise—conduct that degrades a sacred or civil setting.
Tīrtha-māhātmya sections commonly pair geography with discipline: pilgrimage is not only movement through sacred space but also purification of conduct. The text therefore enumerates inner/behavioral impurities that obstruct the fruit of worship and yātrā.