Adhyaya 74 — King Svarashtra, the Deer-Queen’s Curse, and the Rise of Tamasa Manu
तत्रान्धकारे सा रौही चकर्ष वसुधाधिपम् ।
पुच्छे लग्नं महाभागं कृशं धमनिसन्ततौ ॥
tatrāndhakāre sā rauhī cakarṣa vasudhādhipam | pucche lagnaṃ mahābhāgaṃ kṛśaṃ dhamanisantatau ||
Там, во тьме, та rauhī тащила владыку земли — державшегося за её хвост, — благородного, но исхудавшего, с выступившими жилами.
{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "bhakti", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
When one depends on unstable supports, agency reverses: the ‘support’ leads, and the person is led—an ethical warning about dependence and attachment.
Non-Pancalakṣaṇa narrative; functions as moral-psychological storytelling.
The king (ego/aham) being dragged by the ‘deer’ (mind) indicates the psyche pulling the person rather than the person governing the psyche.