Pitṛ-tīrtha Context: Marks of Sin, Śrāddha Discipline, and Karmic Ripening
in Yayāti’s Narrative
वादित्रं वेणुवंशाद्यं गृहोपस्करणानि च । ऊर्णाकार्पासकौशेय रंगपद्मोद्भवानि च
vāditraṃ veṇuvaṃśādyaṃ gṛhopaskaraṇāni ca | ūrṇākārpāsakauśeya raṃgapadmodbhavāni ca
Музыкальные инструменты — например, сделанные из бамбука и тому подобного, — вместе с домашней утварью; а также изделия из шерсти, хлопка и шёлка, равно как окрашенные вещи и продукты, происходящие от цветов лотоса.
Unspecified (verse is a list within the Bhūmi-khaṇḍa narrative context)
Concept: Material objects—music, textiles, household goods—are ethically neutral; dharma is determined by how one acquires and uses them (especially regarding non-stealing and non-greed).
Application: Treat possessions as stewardship: earn honestly, avoid coveting others’ goods, and use arts/comforts in moderation without harming others.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A bustling ancient Indian marketplace transitions into a quiet household interior: bamboo flutes and drums hang beside neatly stacked textiles—wool, cotton, and shimmering silk—while dyed cloths dry in the sun. Lotus-derived goods (lotus-fiber items, lotus-dye, lotus motifs) appear as delicate, sacred-looking wares, hinting that even beautiful objects become morally charged by human intent.","primary_figures":["anonymous merchants","householder couple","weaver","musician holding a bamboo flute"],"setting":"Town bazaar opening into a courtyard home with textile looms and household implements arranged like an inventory","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["saffron ochre","indigo dye-blue","lotus pink","silk ivory","burnished gold"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a richly ornamented bazaar-courtyard tableau with bamboo flutes and drums displayed like temple offerings, stacks of cotton and silk folded in symmetrical tiers, lotus motifs embossed in gold leaf on dyed cloth; jewel-toned reds and greens, gold leaf highlights on instruments and textile borders, traditional South Indian decorative framing, high-detail ornaments on merchants and householders.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: a lyrical market scene with delicate brushwork—musicians testing a bamboo flute, weavers presenting fine garments, lotus ponds hinted in the background; cool, refined palette with soft mountain-like horizons, intricate textile patterns, gentle facial expressions, airy negative space and fine linework.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines and flat natural pigments showing instruments, household implements, and folded textiles arranged in rhythmic bands; stylized lotus blossoms and vines as borders, warm red/yellow/green dominance, large expressive eyes on figures, temple-wall compositional symmetry.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: a decorative inventory scene framed by lotus vines and floral borders; deep blue ground with gold detailing, lotus blossoms and buds surrounding piles of textiles, peacocks perched on drying lines, subtle Krishna-associated lotus symbolism without central deity, intricate repeating motifs and ornate margins."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["market murmur (soft)","bamboo flute testing notes","loom clacks","temple bells (distant)"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: गृह + उपस्करणानि → गृहोपस्करणानि. वेणु + वंश + आद्यम् → वेणुवंशाद्यम्. पद्म + उद्भवानि → पद्मोद्भवानि.
It enumerates categories of items—musical instruments, household goods, textiles (wool/cotton/silk), dyed products, and lotus-derived materials—suggesting a catalog of material goods.
Not directly; it functions more as descriptive/encyclopedic listing typical of the Padma Purana’s broad scope, rather than an explicit doctrinal statement.
The pairing reflects practical classification of goods: fibers (wool, cotton, silk) and their processed forms (dyed/colored textiles), indicating attention to everyday economic and domestic life.