Viṣṇu’s Māyā and the Stratagem Against Vihuṇḍa
with the Kāmodā–Gaṅgādvāra motif
अस्याश्च रोदनाद्दैत्य प्रभवंति न संशयः । तादृशान्येव पुष्पाणि लोहितानि महांति च
asyāśca rodanāddaitya prabhavaṃti na saṃśayaḥ | tādṛśānyeva puṣpāṇi lohitāni mahāṃti ca
Do próprio pranto dela, ó ouvinte, nascem os Daityas—disso não há dúvida. E também surgem flores do mesmo tipo: vermelhas e grandes.
Unspecified (context-dependent narration within Bhūmi-khaṇḍa 118)
Concept: Sorrow too has creative consequence; emotions are not inert—misaligned grief can externalize as disruptive forces, while its ‘flowers’ can still be ritually meaningful when properly directed.
Application: Treat grief with care: seek sāttvic outlets (prayer, service, restraint) so that pain does not ‘give birth’ to harmful actions; channel intensity into constructive offerings.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A divine lady’s eyes brim with tears that fall like rubies; where each tear touches the earth, a towering red blossom unfurls, and shadowy daitya forms rise like silhouettes from the damp ground. The scene balances compassion with foreboding—beauty and danger born from the same sorrow.","primary_figures":["Divine feminine presence (weeping)","Emerging daityas (shadowed, semi-formed)"],"setting":"Mythic earth-plane clearing with darkened soil, red blossoms blooming oversized, and a wind that bends the grasses; no human settlement, only primal emergence.","lighting_mood":"moonlit","color_palette":["crimson red","smoky violet","midnight blue","wet earth brown","silver gray"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a weeping Devī with gold leaf halo; tears rendered as gem-like droplets; from the ground rise large crimson flowers with embossed gold veins, and daitya silhouettes at the periphery; dramatic contrast of rich maroon and deep green, ornate borders, and sacred yet ominous atmosphere.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: delicate portrayal of sorrow—fine tear lines, subdued night palette; oversized red blossoms blooming where tears fall; daityas suggested as soft-edged shadow figures to keep the mood poetic rather than grotesque; sparse landscape with a pale moon.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines, expressive eyes with stylized tears; red blossoms as large patterned motifs; daityas as dark green/black forms with ornamental armor patterns; temple-wall composition with rhythmic repetition of tear-to-flower transformation.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central weeping divine figure framed by an intricate border of red lotus-like blooms; tears depicted as pearl drops; daitya forms minimized into decorative shadow motifs; deep indigo background with gold accents, emphasizing symbolic transformation."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["low wind","distant thunder (soft)","single bell toll","rustling leaves"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: asyāśca = asyāḥ + ca; rodanāddaitya = rodanāt + daitya.
It presents a mythic cause: from a woman’s (or goddess’s) weeping, Daityas are said to arise, and similarly red, large flowers also come forth—linking emotion and cosmic/terrestrial manifestations.
Daityas are a class of powerful beings traditionally associated with Diti’s lineage, often portrayed as adversaries of the Devas, though their roles vary across Purāṇas.
The verse uses symbolic causality: intense inner states (like sorrow) can be portrayed as generating tangible outcomes, emphasizing the Purāṇic theme that mind, emotion, and cosmos are interconnected.