Yayāti Episode: Indra’s Anxiety, the Messenger Motif, and a Discourse on Time (Kāla) and Karma
स तत्र बद्ध्वा रज्ज्वा वै बलाद्दैवेन नीयते । दैवः प्रभुर्हि भूतानां सुखदुःखोपपादने
sa tatra baddhvā rajjvā vai balāddaivena nīyate | daivaḥ prabhurhi bhūtānāṃ sukhaduḥkhopapādane
అక్కడ అతన్ని తాడుతో కట్టి, బలవంతంగా దైవం చేత నడిపించబడతాడు; సుఖదుఃఖాలను కలిగించడంలో దైవమే భూతజాతికి ప్రభువు।
Unspecified (narrative voice within the adhyaya; exact speaker not provided in the input excerpt)
Concept: Beings are driven by daiva/niyati to undergo sukha-duḥkha; recognizing bondage is the first step toward seeking liberation through higher refuge.
Application: Notice compulsive patterns and consequences; cultivate surrender, ethical restraint, and devotional practices to loosen karmic ‘ropes’.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A spectral rope glows around a man’s torso as unseen hands pull him along a narrow path that winds between luminous and dark landscapes—one side a garden of pleasures, the other a thorny wasteland. Above, an impersonal yet majestic ‘Daiva’ appears as a vast celestial wheel or law-mandala, its spokes guiding the rope’s direction.","primary_figures":["a bound human (jīva)","allegorical Daiva as a cosmic mandala/wheel","unseen karmic forces (suggested hands or wind)"],"setting":"a liminal path between two contrasting terrains; sky filled with a law-mandala","lighting_mood":"divine radiance overhead with stark chiaroscuro on the path","color_palette":["electric gold","midnight blue","iron gray","thorn brown","opal white"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: central bound jīva led along a stylized path; above, a large gilded daiva-mandala with gold leaf and embossed relief; ornate borders; rich crimson and emerald accents; the rope highlighted with gold to show inevitability under cosmic order.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: slender winding path through two landscapes; delicate rendering of the rope and the figure’s resigned expression; a translucent mandala in the sky; cool blues and muted earth tones, refined linework and atmospheric depth.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines; dramatic posture of the bound figure; daiva as a large circular yantra-like form with concentric rings; strong indigo/ochre palette; temple mural composition emphasizing cosmic governance.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central circular mandala (daiva) with lotus petals; below, a small bound figure on a winding path; intricate floral borders; deep blue ground with gold highlights; symbolic rather than frightening, emphasizing order over chaos."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["deep mridangam pulse","conch shell swell","low wind drone","single bell strike at 'daivaḥ prabhuḥ'"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: बलाद्दैवेन = बलात् + दैवेन; प्रभुर्हि = प्रभुः + हि; सुखदुःखोपपादने = सुखदुःख + उपपादने (सुख-दुःख द्वन्द्वपूर्वक तत्पुरुष)
It portrays destiny as a binding force—like a rope—that compels beings onward and governs the arising of pleasure and pain.
The verse emphasizes daiva’s power in producing sukha and duḥkha; it does not explicitly address human effort, so it should be read as stressing the dominance of fate in this context rather than as a complete denial of agency.
It encourages humility and steadiness: since सुख and दुःख can be seen as fate-driven, one should cultivate endurance, restraint, and equanimity rather than arrogance in success or despair in suffering.