The Burning of Tripura and the Sacred Greatness of Amarakāṇṭaka
Jvāleśvara on the Narmadā
दह्यंतेनलदग्धानि पुरोद्यानानि दीर्घिकाः । अम्लानैः पंकजैश्छन्ना विस्तीर्णा योजनैः शतैः
dahyaṃtenaladagdhāni purodyānāni dīrghikāḥ | amlānaiḥ paṃkajaiśchannā vistīrṇā yojanaiḥ śataiḥ
ਸੜਨ ਨਾਲ ਪੁਰਾਣੇ ਉਪਵਨ ਅਤੇ ਲੰਬੇ ਸਰੋਵਰ ਝੁਲਸ ਗਏ। ਸੈਂਕੜੇ ਯੋਜਨਾਂ ਤੱਕ ਫੈਲੇ ਵਿਸ਼ਾਲ ਤਲਾਬ ਅਮਲਾਨ ਕਮਲਾਂ ਨਾਲ ਢੱਕੇ ਰਹੇ।
Unspecified (narratorial description within the ongoing dialogue context of Svargakhaṇḍa)
Concept: Amid destruction, some principles remain untouched—purity can persist even when surroundings burn; discern the imperishable within the perishable.
Application: Practice inner steadiness: keep one’s ‘lotus’ (mind/heart) unwithered through japa, ethical discipline, and devotion even when circumstances are harsh.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A panoramic sweep of scorched celestial gardens and elongated tanks stretches beyond sight—yet the water surfaces are carpeted with fresh, unwilted lotuses, their petals luminous against soot-darkened air. Flames lick the edges of marble steps while the lotus field remains serenely intact, creating a mystical paradox of endurance.","primary_figures":["Personified Agni (as consuming force)","Celestial gardeners/attendants (optional, fleeing)"],"setting":"Vast Svarga tanks and former pleasure-gardens, terraces, steps, and pavilions half-burned; lotus carpets spanning ‘hundreds of yojanas’ in symbolic scale.","lighting_mood":"smoke-veiled divine radiance over reflective water","color_palette":["pearl white","lotus pink","burnt umber","antique gold","deep teal"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: enormous lotus-tank rendered as a patterned field of pink and white lotuses with gold leaf highlights; scorched garden arches and charred trees at the margins; stylized flames in raised gold relief; a sense of sacred geometry and opulence despite ruin.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: wide horizontal composition with delicate lotus detailing across a cool teal tank; faint smoke washes and singed garden elements; subtle glow on unwithered petals, emphasizing quiet wonder amid destruction.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: rhythmic lotus motifs filling the tank, bold outlines; contrasting bands of red-orange flames along the banks; temple-panel symmetry with ornamental borders, emphasizing the ‘unwithered’ miracle through bright whites and yellows.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: dense lotus pattern like a textile field, intricate floral borders; scorched garden motifs at corners; deep blue-green ground with gold accents, highlighting the timeless lotus purity against the narrative of burning."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"serene","sound_elements":["soft water ripples","distant crackle of fire","wind through reeds","low temple bell","silence between phrases"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: दह्यंतेनलदग्धानि = दह्यन्ते + नलदग्धानि; पंकजैश्छन्ना = पङ्कजैः + छन्नाः.
The verse depicts an immense terrain of gardens and long water-reservoirs (tanks/ponds), described on a cosmic scale (hundreds of yojanas), with lotus coverage as a defining feature.
Unwithered lotuses are a conventional Purāṇic marker of extraordinary, otherworldly purity and abundance—suggesting a realm where beauty and vitality persist beyond ordinary decay.
Not directly; this verse is primarily descriptive. Its implied lesson is contemplative: it uses vast, idealized imagery to evoke wonder and the grandeur of the Purāṇic cosmos rather than prescribing conduct.