Origin of the Lunar Dynasty: Soma’s Rise, the Tārā Abduction War, Budha–Purūravas Genealogy, and Kārtavīrya Arjuna
त्रैलोक्यं दक्षिणा तेन ऋत्विग्भ्यः प्रतिपादिता । सोमः प्राप्याथदुष्प्राप्यमैश्वर्यं सृष्टिसत्कृतं
trailokyaṃ dakṣiṇā tena ṛtvigbhyaḥ pratipāditā | somaḥ prāpyāthaduṣprāpyamaiśvaryaṃ sṛṣṭisatkṛtaṃ
ఆయన త్రిలోకమును దక్షిణగా ఋత్వికులకు సమర్పించాడు. అనంతరం సోముడు సృష్టి-క్రమమే సత్కరించిన దుర్లభమైన ఐశ్వర్యాన్ని పొందాడు.
Unspecified narrator (contextual speaker not provided in the excerpt)
Concept: Yajña and rightful dakṣiṇā uphold cosmic order; prosperity (aiśvarya) is portrayed as a fruit that is ‘creation-honored’ when aligned with sacrificial dharma.
Application: Treat giving (dakṣiṇā/charity) as sacred duty; align ambition with ethical offering and gratitude to teachers/elders/mentors.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A vast cosmic yajña unfolds where the three worlds themselves appear as luminous offerings—earth as a jeweled altar, mid-space as a garlanded pavilion, and heaven as a golden canopy. Priests receive radiant dakṣiṇā while Soma, crowned with moonlight, rises into sovereign splendor, surrounded by the orderly wheels of creation.","primary_figures":["Soma (Chandra)","ṛtvij priests","personified Triloka (earth, atmosphere, heaven)"],"setting":"A celestial sacrificial arena with a lotus-shaped altar floating in starry space; ritual fires burn with blue-white flames; constellations form mandala patterns.","lighting_mood":"divine radiance","color_palette":["moon-silver","saffron gold","deep indigo","lotus pink","emerald green"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Soma enthroned above a lotus-yajña altar, priests receiving dakṣiṇā symbolized as miniature three-world globes; heavy gold leaf halos, rich crimson and emerald textiles, gem-studded crowns, ornate arch framing the cosmic sacrifice, stylized flames and conch motifs.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: a lyrical cosmic yajña scene with delicate linework—Soma luminous and serene, priests in refined profiles, the three worlds suggested by layered landscapes (earthly greens, misty mid-sky, golden heaven), soft gradients, floral borders and subtle star patterns.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines and temple-wall composition—Soma with large expressive eyes, crescent crown, ritual fire and priests in symmetrical arrangement; natural pigment palette with dominant reds, yellows, greens; cosmic mandala behind as stylized lotus and stars.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: a lotus-filled cosmic altar with ornate floral borders; Soma centered with moon-disc aura, attendants and priests arranged like a festival tableau; deep blue background with gold star dots, intricate vines, lotuses, and auspicious symbols (shankha, chakra) subtly woven in."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["temple bells","low drone of tanpura","soft conch shell","crackling ritual fire"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: prāpyātha = prāpya + atha; duṣprāpyamaiśvaryam = duṣprāpyam + aiśvaryam.
It hyperbolically expresses unparalleled generosity and ritual completion—an offering so vast that it symbolizes total sovereignty being surrendered to the sacrificial order and its officiants.
Soma refers to the Moon-god (often also a royal figure in Purāṇic narratives). He is said to attain duṣprāpya aiśvarya—exceptional, difficult-to-obtain sovereignty/prosperity.
It underscores that disciplined ritual action and rightful giving (dakṣiṇā) are portrayed as causes for attaining legitimate prosperity—wealth and power framed as validated by dharma and cosmic order.