The Royal Consecration
Cosmic Appointments and Directional Guardians
नागानां पुण्यवीर्याणां वासुकिं च चतुर्मुखः । सर्पाणां तु तथा राज्ये अभिषिच्य स तक्षकम्
nāgānāṃ puṇyavīryāṇāṃ vāsukiṃ ca caturmukhaḥ | sarpāṇāṃ tu tathā rājye abhiṣicya sa takṣakam
नागानां पुण्यवीर्याणां वासुकिं च चतुर्मुखः । सर्पाणां तु तथा राज्ये अभिषिच्य स तक्षकम् ॥
Unspecified narrator (within the Bhūmi-khaṇḍa dialogue frame)
Concept: Power must be consecrated and bounded: potent beings (nāgas, sarpas) are placed under designated leadership to maintain cosmic equilibrium.
Application: Channel strong instincts and energies through discipline and accountability; appoint ‘inner leadership’ (rules, routines) for potentially disruptive forces.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A luminous subterranean palace of crystal and emerald opens beneath the earth, where Brahmā stands on a lotus dais performing abhiṣeka. Vāsuki rises in majestic coils crowned with jewels, calm and radiant, while Takṣaka—fiercer, with flaring hood—bows to receive kingship over the sarpas; attendants hold golden kalaśas and lamps that reflect off gem-studded cavern walls.","primary_figures":["Brahmā (Caturmukha)","Vāsuki","Takṣaka","Nāga attendants"],"setting":"Nāga-loka cavern-palace with jeweled columns, underground lotus pools, and shimmering mineral walls.","lighting_mood":"lamp-lit with divine radiance","color_palette":["emerald green","lapis blue","golden amber","pearl white","obsidian black"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Brahmā on lotus throne consecrating Vāsuki and Takṣaka; heavy gold leaf on crowns, hoods, and palace ornaments; rich reds/greens, gem-like detailing, symmetrical composition with ornate arch and haloed figures.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: refined subterranean scene with delicate coils and patterned serpent hoods; cool jewel palette, soft shading; Brahmā’s calm abhiṣeka gesture; lotus pools and crystalline rocks rendered with lyrical finesse.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines for serpent hoods, stylized jewel patterns; Brahmā frontal with four faces; saturated greens and yellows against deep blue-black cavern background; temple mural rhythm and iconographic clarity.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central abhiṣeka vignette framed by ornate floral borders; serpents stylized into decorative repeating hood motifs; deep blue ground with gold highlights, lotus patterns in subterranean pools, intricate textile-like detailing."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["deep drone (tanpura)","echoing cavern ambience","soft temple bells","water dripping","conch shell (low, distant)"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: पुण्यवीर्याणां is a compound (पुण्य+वीर्य); चतुर्मुखः is bahuvrīhi; no major external sandhi beyond standard anusvāra/visarga orthography.
“Caturmukha” means “four-faced” and is a standard epithet of Brahmā, the creator-deity, here portrayed as establishing order by consecrating rulers.
It mentions both groups and assigns leadership: Vāsuki is highlighted among the nāgas, while Takṣaka is installed in kingship over the serpents (sarpas), indicating an ordered hierarchy within serpent beings.
The verse emphasizes dharmic governance: authority is legitimized through consecration and is portrayed as part of cosmic administration, where even non-human realms have appointed order and responsibility.