The Procedure for the Consecration of a Pond
चतुरश्रं तु परितो वृत्तं मध्ये सुशोभनम् । वेद्याश्चोपरितः कृत्वा ग्रहान्लोकपतींस्ततः
caturaśraṃ tu parito vṛttaṃ madhye suśobhanam | vedyāścoparitaḥ kṛtvā grahānlokapatīṃstataḥ
చుట్టూ చతురస్రంగా చేసి, మధ్యలో సుందరమైన వృత్తాన్ని ఉంచాలి; ఆపై వేదికపై దానిని స్థాపించి, తరువాత గ్రహాలను మరియు లోకపాలకులను విన్యసించాలి।
Unspecified (narrative/ritual instruction context within Sṛṣṭikhaṇḍa)
Concept: Sacred geometry and directional order in yajña/pujā align the practitioner with cosmic governance (grahas and lokapālas), producing harmony.
Application: Create ‘inner altar’ order: begin worship/work by setting clear boundaries (square) and a centered focus (circle), then acknowledge forces that influence life (time, directions, duties) before acting.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: temple
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A freshly plastered altar courtyard is shown from above: a perfect square maṇḍala with a luminous circle at its heart, drawn in rice flour and vermilion. Around it, symbolic emblems of the grahas and the lokapālas are placed in their directions, turning the ritual ground into a miniature cosmos.","primary_figures":["Ritual priest (ṛtvij)","Grahas (symbolic icons)","Lokapālas (directional guardians, symbolic presence)"],"setting":"Open-air yajña-śālā with a raised vedi, rangoli-like maṇḍala lines, directional markers, and offering trays","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["vermillion red","rice-white","saffron gold","indigo blue","leaf green"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: top-down sacred altar scene with a square vedi and a radiant circular bindu at center, gold leaf highlighting the maṇḍala borders and directional emblems of lokapālas, rich reds and greens, priest in traditional attire placing graha symbols, ornate gold embellishment and gem-like detailing on ritual vessels.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: delicate square-and-circle maṇḍala on an earthen courtyard, cool refined palette with lyrical naturalism, priest carefully arranging small graha icons and directional flags, fine linework, soft Himalayan-like sky tones, subtle floral borders.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines of the square vedi and central circle, stylized directional guardians indicated at the edges, natural pigment reds/yellows/greens, temple-wall aesthetic with rhythmic geometric symmetry and large expressive eyes on guardian motifs.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: ornate maṇḍala framed by lotus borders, deep blue ground with gold detailing, directional motifs and celestial symbols arranged symmetrically, intricate floral vines and peacock-feather accents, devotional textile composition emphasizing sacred geometry."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Bhupali","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["temple bells","soft conch shell","low drone (tanpura)","morning birds"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: suśobhanam = su-śobhanam; vedyāścoparitaḥ = vedyāḥ + ca + uparitaḥ; grahānlokapatīṃstataḥ = grahān + loka-patīn + tataḥ.
It describes a ritual or cosmological diagram: the square suggests ordered space (a bounded sacred field), while the central circle evokes completeness and the cosmic center, suitable for placing deities/cosmic powers.
Grahās are the planetary powers used in Indic cosmology/ritual (e.g., Sun, Moon, etc.), and lokapatīs are the guardians or rulers of the directions/worlds (often aligned with the lokapālas).
It instructs constructing an altar-layout: form a square boundary, create a circular center, then arrange/establish the planetary deities and world-guardians upon/above the altar in the prescribed order.