Vena’s Fall into Adharma and the Prelude to Pṛthu’s Birth
बाल्ये कृतं मया पापं सुशंखस्य महात्मनः । तपसि संस्थितस्यापि नान्यत्किंचित्कृतं मया
bālye kṛtaṃ mayā pāpaṃ suśaṃkhasya mahātmanaḥ | tapasi saṃsthitasyāpi nānyatkiṃcitkṛtaṃ mayā
என் பால்யத்தில் மகாத்மா சுசங்கருக்கு எதிராக நான் பாவம் செய்தேன். அவர் தவத்தில் நிலைத்திருந்தபோதும், பரிகாரத்திற்காக நான் வேறொன்றும் செய்யவில்லை.
Unspecified (first-person narrator within the Adhyaya’s dialogue context)
Concept: Offending a tapasvin (especially without later amends) generates enduring pāpa; neglecting prāyaścitta allows karmic seeds to mature into suffering and social disorder.
Application: Do not dismiss ‘small’ harms done in youth; seek reconciliation and make amends promptly—apology, service, and corrective discipline.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A young child, impulsive and unaware, stands near the hermitage of the great Suśaṅkha, whose matted hair and steady gaze radiate tapas like heat-haze. The scene freezes at the moment of transgression, while in the background the adult narrator appears in shadow, watching with regret—two timelines layered to show unatoned karma.","primary_figures":["Suśaṅkha (tapasvin)","the child (young Sunīthā or implied speaker)","adult confessor (same person, symbolic double)"],"setting":"forest āśrama with kusa mats, water pot, sacred fire, and silent trees","lighting_mood":"forest dappled","color_palette":["earth brown","sage green","ash white","rust red","sunlit gold"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: forest āśrama scene with Suśaṅkha seated in meditation beside a small homa fire, gold-leaf aura around his head, the child figure in the foreground mid-action, ornate foliage patterns, rich reds/greens, gold embellishment on fire, ornaments minimal to emphasize ascetic power, a faint secondary figure (adult confessor) rendered as a translucent silhouette.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: lyrical forest hermitage with delicate leaves and birds, Suśaṅkha calm and luminous, the child shown with expressive innocence, subtle narrative layering with a ghosted adult figure in the corner, cool greens and warm ochres, fine brushwork on bark and grass.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: iconic tapasvin with bold outlines and intense eyes, stylized forest and fire altar, the child in contrasting posture, red/yellow/green pigments, strong compositional symmetry, moral drama conveyed through color contrast and halos.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: symbolic āśrama framed by lotus and creeper borders; a central sacred fire mandala; peacocks and deer at the edges; Suśaṅkha as a serene central figure; the child’s act shown as a small but dark motif, deep blue-green ground with gold highlights."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"emotional","sound_elements":["forest birds suddenly quieting","crackle of fire","single sharp bell","wind through leaves","long pause after ‘pāpam’"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: संस्थितस्यापि = संस्थितस्य + अपि; नान्यत्किंचित्कृतं = न + अन्यत् + किञ्चित् + कृतम् (न + अन्यत् → नान्यत्; त् + क → त्क)।
It highlights personal accountability: wrongdoing done even in childhood remains one’s responsibility, and failing to pursue restitution or repentance is itself a serious lapse.
Suśaṅkha is named as a “mahātmā” (noble, great-souled person) against whom the speaker confesses having committed a wrong; the verse emphasizes the victim’s spiritual stature (steadfast in tapas).
The verse frames the need for corrective action: confession alone is not presented as sufficient—one should actively seek appropriate atonement and reconciliation rather than doing “nothing else.”