Narrative of the Śūdra’s Renunciation of Greed
with the Tulādhāra Greatness Prelude
संतोषो मे महाभोग्यं महादानं वराटकम् । मातृवत्परदाराश्च परद्रव्याणि लोष्ठवत्
saṃtoṣo me mahābhogyaṃ mahādānaṃ varāṭakam | mātṛvatparadārāśca paradravyāṇi loṣṭhavat
సంతృప్తియే నా మహాభోగము; కవడీంత దానమే నా మహాదానము. పరస్త్రీలు నాకు మాతృసములు, పరధనం మట్టిగడ్డవలె.
Unspecified in provided excerpt (context needed from surrounding verses of Sṛṣṭikhaṇḍa 53).
Concept: Santoṣa is the highest enjoyment; even a cowrie can be ‘great charity’ when given with purity; regard others’ spouses as mothers and others’ wealth as a clod.
Application: Practice contentment by limiting wants; give regularly even if small; cultivate protective boundaries in relationships; train the mind to see tempting objects as ‘lumps of earth’—not as identity or entitlement.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A renunciate-householder figure sits peacefully beside a small tulasi altar, holding a single cowrie shell in his palm as an offering, while turning away from a glittering heap of coins that lies ignored like mere earth. In the background, he respectfully bows to a passing woman as to a mother, visually encoding the vow of chastity and reverence.","primary_figures":["vow-keeper (householder/ascetic)","passing woman (depicted respectfully as mother-figure)","optional onlookers"],"setting":"simple courtyard with earthen floor, tulasi platform, modest shrine","lighting_mood":"temple lamp-lit","color_palette":["lamp gold","terracotta","deep maroon","sage green","pearl white"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: central serene figure offering a single cowrie at a small Viṣṇu shrine, gold leaf halo and ornate arch, rich reds/greens, coins rendered but muted like earth, respectful gesture toward a veiled mother-like figure, gem-studded ornamentation emphasizing dharma.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: intimate domestic-courtyard scene with delicate gestures, soft terracotta architecture, tulasi planter, subtle symbolism of ignored wealth, refined facial expressions conveying santoṣa, cool balanced palette.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: stylized vow-keeper with bold outlines, lamp-lit shrine, strong red/yellow/green pigments, symbolic cowrie enlarged as motif, background figures simplified, emphasis on moral iconography.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: devotional courtyard framed by lotus borders, a small Viṣṇu icon, cowrie motif repeated like floral medallions, peacocks and cows at edges, deep blue and gold highlights, narrative vignettes of ‘parastrī-mātṛvat’ and ‘paradravya-loṣṭravat’ in side panels."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"devotional","suggested_raga":"Desh","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"serene","sound_elements":["oil lamp flicker","soft bell","low conch drone","quiet footsteps"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: mātṛvatparadārāśca → mātṛ-vat + para-dārāḥ + ca.
It defines a dharmic character through contentment, minimalism in giving, sexual restraint (seeing others’ wives as mothers), and non-covetousness (treating others’ wealth as worthless).
The cowrie symbolizes extremely small monetary value, highlighting humility and non-attachment—charity is not measured by amount but by the giver’s detachment and purity of intent.
By presenting contentment as the highest enjoyment and rejecting desire for others’ partners and property, it expresses core vairāgya: freedom from craving, greed, and lust as a foundation for spiritual life.