The Battle of Nahuṣa and Huṇḍa
within the Guru-tīrtha Glorification Episode
मुद्गरं पतितं दृष्ट्वा दशखण्डमयं भुवि । गदामुद्यम्य वेगेन राजानमभ्यधावत
mudgaraṃ patitaṃ dṛṣṭvā daśakhaṇḍamayaṃ bhuvi | gadāmudyamya vegena rājānamabhyadhāvata
मुद्गरं पतितं दृष्ट्वा दशखण्डमयं भुवि । गदामुद्यम्य वेगेन राजानमभ्यधावत
Narrator (contextual; specific dialogue-speaker not identifiable from the single verse alone)
Concept: Even when a threat is checked, persistence of adharma demands continued readiness; victory requires follow-through.
Application: After an initial success, don’t relax prematurely; consolidate gains and prepare for the next wave of challenge.
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: vira
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"On the ground lies the fallen mace, split into ten jagged pieces like broken thunder. The attacker snatches up a heavy club and surges forward in a low, aggressive sprint, while the king braces—feet planted, bow and gaze aligned—anticipating the next impact.","primary_figures":["Bhūpati (the king)","Vajravega or the charging warrior (club-wielder)"],"setting":"Foreground: ten mace fragments scattered across cracked earth; background: swirling dust corridor of the charge, with toppled standards and a dim fort outline.","lighting_mood":"smoky dusk with ember highlights","color_palette":["burnt umber","ember orange","midnight blue","steel gray","dull gold"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: foreground emphasizes the ten mace fragments with gold-leaf edges; the charging figure with club in a powerful diagonal; the king poised with regal ornaments and halo; rich reds/greens, embossed gold on weapons and jewelry, dramatic yet icon-like symmetry.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: careful rendering of shattered pieces on earth; the charger’s flowing garments and dust plume; the king’s calm readiness; cool twilight blues with warm ember accents, refined expressions and kinetic lines.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: stylized ten fragments as patterned shapes; bold outlines on the club and charging posture; saturated reds/yellows/greens with temple-wall rhythm; the king’s steady eyes and composed stance foregrounded.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: ornate border of lotuses and vines; ten fragments arranged almost like a floral scatter; deep indigo ground with gold highlights; Vaishnava banner motifs near the king, intricate textile patterns on sashes and armor."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"fast-dramatic","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["running footfalls","gravel crunch","battle shouts (distant)","low drum pulse"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: गदामुद्यम्य = गदाम् + उद्यम्य; राजानमभ्यधावत = राजानम् + अभ्यधावत
A warrior sees a mace shattered on the ground, lifts his own gada (club), and rushes at the king with speed.
It indicates the fallen mudgara is broken into ten pieces, emphasizing the intensity of the preceding blow or conflict.
On its own, the verse highlights impulsive martial reaction—responding immediately to a sign of defeat or damage—though the fuller ethical lesson depends on the surrounding narrative.