Origin of the Lunar Dynasty: Soma’s Rise, the Tārā Abduction War, Budha–Purūravas Genealogy, and Kārtavīrya Arjuna
प्रह्लादशक्रयोर्भीमं न कश्चिद्विजयी तयोः । ततो देवासुरैः पृष्टः पृथग्देवश्चतुर्मुखः
prahlādaśakrayorbhīmaṃ na kaścidvijayī tayoḥ | tato devāsuraiḥ pṛṣṭaḥ pṛthagdevaścaturmukhaḥ
प्रह्लादशक्रयोर्भीमं न कश्चिद्विजयी तयोः । ततो देवासुरैः पृष्टः पृथग्देवश्चतुर्मुखः ॥
Narrator (Purāṇic narrator; immediate speaker not explicit in this single verse)
Concept: When power reaches stalemate, recourse to higher wisdom and cosmic law is necessary; consultation replaces brute force.
Application: In entrenched conflicts, seek counsel, mediation, and principled frameworks rather than escalation.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Prahlāda and Śakra face each other amid a whirlwind of weapons and mantras, neither yielding—two titanic forces locked in balance. The scene shifts to a celestial council: devas and asuras, still armed, stand in separate rows before four-faced Brahmā seated on a lotus throne, as if the universe itself pauses for a verdict.","primary_figures":["Prahlāda","Śakra (Indra)","Brahmā (Caturmukha)","Devas","Asuras"],"setting":"split composition: battlefield foreground transitioning to Brahmā’s lotus-court in the sky, with cosmic clouds and a lotus dais","lighting_mood":"divine radiance with storm undertones","color_palette":["lotus pink","cloud white","saffron gold","deep teal","smoky purple"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Brahmā on a lotus throne with gold leaf halo and four serene faces, devas and asuras in ordered rows, while a smaller inset shows Prahlāda and Indra in fierce stalemate; rich reds/greens, heavy gold ornamentation, symmetrical court arrangement.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: elegant celestial court with delicate cloud bands and lotus motifs; Brahmā rendered with refined features, devas/asuras separated by color-coded garments; inset vignette of the duel, cool palette with subtle gold, lyrical spacing.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines—Brahmā central with four faces, large eyes, ornate crown; devas and asuras flanking in rhythmic poses; dramatic duel suggested with stylized weapons; strong red/yellow/green palette and temple-wall framing.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: Brahmā seated on a giant lotus with intricate floral borders; devas and asuras arranged symmetrically like a ceremonial procession; duel represented as circular medallion motifs; deep blues and gold highlights, ornate textile detailing."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["thunder fading into silence","conch shell (single call)","murmured counsel","wind through clouds"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: प्रह्लादशक्रयोः is a dvandva in genitive dual; कश्चिद्विजयी = कश्चित् + विजयी; पृथग्देवः = पृथक् + देवः; देवासुरैः is dvandva instrumental plural.
Because the conflict reaches a stalemate, both sides seek a higher cosmic authority—Brahmā, the four-faced creator—who is portrayed as a source of counsel and order when rival powers cannot resolve matters by force.
‘Caturmukha’ (four-faced) highlights Brahmā’s comprehensive vision and oversight, symbolizing all-directional knowledge and his role as an arbiter in matters affecting cosmic balance.
The verse suggests that power alone may not decide outcomes; when strength cannot settle disputes, seeking wise guidance and a principled resolution becomes necessary.