Chapter 338 — शृङ्गारादिरसनिरूपणम्
Exposition of the Rasas beginning with Śṛṅgāra
मनोव्यापारभूयिष्ठो मन आरम्भ उच्यते द्विविधः पौरुषस्त्रैण ईदृशो ऽपि प्रसिध्यति
manovyāpārabhūyiṣṭho mana ārambha ucyate dvividhaḥ pauruṣastraiṇa īdṛśo 'pi prasidhyati
మానసిక వ్యాపారం అధికంగా ఉండే స్థితిని మనస్సు యొక్క ‘ఆరంభం’ అంటారు. అది రెండు విధాలు—పౌరుష (పురుష-స్వభావం) మరియు స్త్రైణ (స్త్రీ-స్వభావం); ఆచరణలో కూడా అలాగే ప్రసిద్ధం।
Lord Agni (instructional narration to the sage Vasiṣṭha)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Alamkara","secondary_vidya":"Philosophy","practical_application":"In character portrayal and aesthetic analysis, diagnose the dominant mental initiative (ārambha) and model it in two modes (masculine/feminine) to guide diction, gesture, pacing, and emotional coloration.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Definition","entry_title":"Mānasa-ārambha: predominance of mental activity; twofold (pौरुष/स्त्रैण)","lookup_keywords":["mānasa-ārambha","mano-vyāpāra","pauruṣa","straina","prakṛti"],"quick_summary":"Ārambha is defined as a state where mental activity predominates. It is practically recognized in two modes—masculine (pauruṣa) and feminine (straina)—useful for characterization and aesthetic effect."}
Concept: Inner mental predominance shapes outward expression; typologies (twofold modes) help systematize aesthetic portrayal.
Application: For writers/actors: choose behavioral markers (speech tempo, gaze, decisiveness, softness) consistent with the selected mode to maintain coherence of character.
Khanda Section: Sahitya-shastra (Kavya/Alankara and technical definitions)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"An ācārya demonstrates two contrasting portrayals of ‘initiative’: a decisive, firm pauruṣa mode and a softer, graceful straina mode, with students noting differences in posture, gaze, and speech.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural: two actor-figures side by side, one with firm stance and direct gaze (pauruṣa), the other with gentle curves and modest gaze (straina), teacher indicating mind-centered origin, stylized motifs around the head to show mano-vyāpāra.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore: dual-portrait composition with gold ornamentation, pauruṣa figure with upright posture and bright aura, straina figure with graceful pose and softer aura, inscriptions naming the two ārambhas.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore: instructional chart-like painting, fine linework showing posture and hand gestures, teacher with pointer, annotations for ‘mano-vyāpāra-bhūyiṣṭha’ and the two modes.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature: atelier of performers, master trainer coaching two actors, subtle differences in expression and stance, detailed costumes and interior architecture."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"instructional","suggested_raga":"Shankarabharanam","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: मनोव्यापारभूयिष्ठो → मनः-व्यापार-भूयिष्ठः; मन आरम्भ → मनः आरम्भः; पौरुषस्त्रैण → पौरुषः स्त्रैणः; ईदृशो ऽपि → ईदृशः अपि
Related Themes: Agni Purana 338 (pauruṣa/straina qualities and rasa mechanics)
It gives a technical definition: ‘ārambha’ is the mind’s initiative/undertaking characterized by predominance of mental activity, and it is classified into two types—masculine and feminine.
Beyond myth and ritual, the Agni Purana also codifies scholarly terminology used in śāstra (especially sahitya/alankara discourse), showing its role as a compendium that includes systematic definitions and classifications.
By identifying and classifying mental initiative, the verse supports self-knowledge and disciplined intention—key to making one’s actions (karma) more deliberate and ethically/spiritually aligned.