Rudra’s Wrath at Daksha’s Sacrifice and the Iconography of Kālarūpa through the Zodiac
नवशादूलसंछन्नवसुधायां च सर्वशः नित्यं चरति फुल्लेषु सरसां पुलिनेषु च
navaśādūlasaṃchannavasudhāyāṃ ca sarvaśaḥ nityaṃ carati phulleṣu sarasāṃ pulineṣu ca
«Sobre a terra, por toda parte coberta de brotos e relva tenra, ele se move continuamente—entre lugares em flor e sobre os bancos de areia/margens dos lagos».
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Natural settings (fresh growth, blossoms, watersides) are treated as meaningful indicators; the ethical note is attentiveness to environment—prosperity and auspiciousness are read through harmony with seasons and landscapes.
Ancillary descriptive lore, not a core pancalakṣaṇa item. It exemplifies the Purāṇa’s encyclopedic tendency to embed cosmological/astrological description alongside narrative frameworks.
Fresh shoots and flowering places evoke renewal and fecundity; lake-shores (pulina) suggest liminal zones where life gathers. Symbolically, the rāśi’s ‘roaming’ links energetic beginnings (Meṣa) with verdant, water-adjacent vitality.