Marks of the Debt-Bound/Enemy Son, Filial Dharma, Detachment, and the Durvāsā–Dharma Episode
तादृशं पश्य धर्मात्मन्वैश्वदेवसमप्रभम् । यत्तपो हि त्वया विप्र सर्वदेवसमाश्रितम्
tādṛśaṃ paśya dharmātmanvaiśvadevasamaprabham | yattapo hi tvayā vipra sarvadevasamāśritam
Contempla tal esplendor, ó justo: ele brilha como o conjunto dos Viśvedevas; pois a austeridade por ti praticada, ó brâmane, é de fato sustentada e amparada por todos os deuses.
Unspecified (context-dependent narrator/speaker addressing a brāhmaṇa)
Concept: Tapas aligned with dharma becomes a god-supported power, producing a visible ‘splendour’ (tejas) recognized by the divine order.
Application: Sustain disciplined practice (study, japa, restraint, service) without seeking applause; let integrity be the ‘splendour’ that naturally manifests and benefits others.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A venerable brāhmaṇa ascetic stands in quiet tapas, his body haloed with a soft, expanding tejas. Around him, the Viśvedevas appear as a luminous collective—many-faced yet harmonious—offering subtle gestures of protection, as if the very sky is endorsing his vow.","primary_figures":["brāhmaṇa tapasvin","Viśvedevas (collective deities)","subtle presence of cosmic order (ṛta)"],"setting":"Forest hermitage edge with a simple kuśa seat, sacrificial fire faintly glowing, distant canopy opening into a radiant sky.","lighting_mood":"divine radiance","color_palette":["gold leaf","sandalwood beige","smoky saffron","pearl white","deep indigo"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a seated brāhmaṇa ascetic with pronounced tejas halo, Viśvedevas arranged in a semicircle as radiant divine figures, heavy gold leaf aura-work, rich crimson and emerald borders, gem-studded ornaments on the devas, stylized sacred fire and lotus motifs framing the scene, South Indian iconographic symmetry and ornate arch (prabhāmaṇḍala).","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: a serene forest āśrama with delicate trees and a pale riverlet in the distance, the ascetic’s aura painted as a translucent wash, Viśvedevas as softly individualized celestial beings in the sky, cool lyrical palette with refined faces, fine linework, gentle Himalayan-like slopes and mist.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines, the tapasvin in ochre and earthy tones, devas in saturated reds/yellows/greens with large expressive eyes, a strong circular halo, temple-wall aesthetic with ornamental creepers and lotus medallions, sacred fire stylized with rhythmic flame patterns.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central radiant aura like a lotus mandala behind the ascetic, surrounding floral borders with marigold and lotus motifs, celestial attendants above, intricate white-on-indigo detailing, gold highlights, peacocks perched on vines, devotional symmetry reminiscent of Nathdwara textiles (even if Krishna is not central)."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"devotional","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"reverent-soft","sound_elements":["soft temple bells","low conch drone","forest birds","gentle fire crackle","brief contemplative silence"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: धर्मात्मन्वैश्वदेवसमप्रभम् → धर्मात्मन् + वैश्वदेवसमप्रभम्; यत्तपो → यत् + तपः.
The Viśvedevas are a collective class of Vedic deities often invoked together as “all the gods,” here used to indicate a unified, divine radiance.
It presents tapas as spiritually luminous and divinely endorsed—so potent that it is said to be “supported by all the gods,” implying cosmic legitimacy and efficacy.
The verse links spiritual power with righteousness: true brilliance and divine support are portrayed as arising from disciplined practice rooted in dharma.