The Tārakāmaya War: Divine Mustering, Māyā Countermeasures, Aurva Fire, and Viṣṇu’s Slaying of Kālanemi
त्रिदिवारोहिभिर्ज्वालैर्जृम्भमाणो दिशो दश । निर्दहन्सर्वभूतानि ववृधे सोंतकोपमः
tridivārohibhirjvālairjṛmbhamāṇo diśo daśa | nirdahansarvabhūtāni vavṛdhe soṃtakopamaḥ
Com chamas que subiam aos céus, alastrando-se pelas dez direções, queimando todos os seres, ele cresceu, semelhante ao furor do fogo da dissolução cósmica.
Narrator (context not provided; speaker cannot be conclusively identified from the single verse alone)
Concept: Worldly existence is vulnerable to dissolution; seek the imperishable refuge beyond elemental upheavals.
Application: Contemplate impermanence to reduce attachment and cultivate steady devotion; in crises, return to core values and spiritual refuge rather than panic.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: raudra
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A colossal firestorm blooms outward, its flames climbing like ladders into heaven while branching into all ten directions. Countless beings flee as silhouettes against the blaze, and the sky itself seems to peel back into smoke, suggesting the onset of cosmic dissolution.","primary_figures":["Aurva/Agni as the expanding conflagration (may be anthropomorphic or elemental)","Terrified beings (humans, devas, animals as silhouettes)"],"setting":"Cosmic landscape—earth below, mid-sky filled with smoke, heavenward vault lit by towering flames; directions indicated by subtle compass-like mandala","lighting_mood":"apocalyptic glare","color_palette":["blazing orange","sulfur yellow","ink black","ashen white","blood red"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a grand multi-register composition—earth, mid-sky, and heaven—engulfed by embossed gold-leaf flames; Aurva/Agni central with a massive aureole, ornate borders, rich reds and greens contrasting the inferno, dramatic iconographic symmetry.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: panoramic wildfire across a stylized landscape, delicate smoke veils and fine flame tongues; tiny fleeing figures, cool gray-blue sky overwhelmed by warm blaze, poetic yet terrifying scale contrast.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines and rhythmic flame patterns filling the frame, ten-direction mandala cues, intense red/yellow palette with black smoke bands; narrative clarity with stylized fleeing beings.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: the fire rendered as a vast lotus-flame mandala expanding to the borders, deep indigo background nearly consumed by vermilion and gold; intricate floral borders distorted by heat motifs, miniature beings at the edges in flight."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"fast-dramatic","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["roaring conflagration","howling wind","thunder","conch shell","temple bells swallowed by noise"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: tridivārohibhiḥ + jvālaiḥ → tridivārohibhirjvālaiḥ; nirdahan + sarvabhūtāni → nirdahansarvabhūtāni; saḥ + antakopamaḥ → soṃtakopamaḥ (anusvāra by sandhi).
A terrifying, all-consuming fire whose flames rise to the heavens, spread through the ten directions, and burn all beings—an image associated with pralaya (cosmic dissolution).
Antaka is a name associated with Death (often linked with Yama or the principle of death). Here it functions as a metaphor for an unstoppable, annihilating force.
It underscores impermanence: worldly life and embodied existence are fragile, so one should cultivate dharma and spiritual refuge rather than clinging to transient forms.