Nara-Narayana’s Tapas, Indra’s Temptation, and the Burning of Kama: The Origin of Ananga and the Shiva-Linga Episode
ततो माधवकन्दर्पौ ताश्चैवाप्सरसो वराः बदर्याश्रममागम्य विचिक्रीडुर्यथेच्छया
tato mādhavakandarpau tāścaivāpsaraso varāḥ badaryāśramamāgamya vicikrīḍuryathecchayā
Затем Мадхава и Кандарпа вместе с теми превосходными апсарами пришли в Бадарьяшраму и там предавались играм по своему желанию.
{ "primaryRasa": "shringara", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Even in a sacred hermitage, the text depicts the presence of powerful aesthetic forces (love, beauty, play). The implicit lesson is discernment: the āśrama is a testing-ground where allure may appear, and steadiness of mind is required for tapas and dharma.
This is best classified under Vamśānucarita/Carita-style narration (episodic descriptive narrative around sacred places and divine figures), rather than sarga/pratisarga (cosmogony) or manvantara.
Mādhava (divine order/preservation) alongside Kandarpā (desire) signals the Purāṇic view that kāma is a cosmic principle that must be harmonized with dharma—especially in pilgrimage/āśrama settings where inner discipline is central.