Chapter 228 — स्वप्नाध्यायः
Svapnādhāyaḥ / Chapter on Dreams
षड्भिर्मासैर् द्वितीये तु त्रिभिर्मासैर् त्रियामिकाः चतुर्थे त्वर्धमासेन दशाहादरुणोदये
ṣaḍbhirmāsair dvitīye tu tribhirmāsair triyāmikāḥ caturthe tvardhamāsena daśāhādaruṇodaye
ในระดับที่สอง ผลสำเร็จภายในหกเดือน; ระดับที่สาม ภายในสามเดือน; ระดับที่สี่ ภายในครึ่งเดือน; และในระดับสูงสุด ภายในสิบวัน ณ เวลาอรุโณทัย (ยามรุ่งอรุณ)
Lord Agni (in discourse to sage Vasiṣṭha, typical Agni Purana narration frame)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Jyotisha","secondary_vidya":"Samanya","practical_application":"Timing-based prognostication: estimating when a predicted result will manifest (phala-pāka) based on graded conditions and the auspicious window of aruṇodaya.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"List","entry_title":"Phala-pāka-kāla (Ripening time of results by grade)","lookup_keywords":["phala-pāka","kāla-nirṇaya","aruṇodaya","muhūrta","śakuna-phala"],"quick_summary":"Gives a graded schedule for when an indicated result is expected to mature—ranging from months to ten days—highlighting aruṇodaya as a decisive timing marker."}
Concept: Kāla as the regulator of phala (results) and the importance of liminal times (sandhi) like aruṇodaya for assessment.
Application: Use near-dawn as a standard reference point when fixing the expected maturation window of an omen/prediction.
Khanda Section: Jyotisha & Muhurta (Kala-nirnaya / Time-reckoning and ritual timing)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A dawn horizon with the first reddish light (aruṇodaya) while a learned astrologer marks time on a palm-leaf almanac, indicating graded time-to-result (months to ten days).","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala temple mural style, warm earthen palette, aruṇodaya sky with red-gold band, a seated jyotiṣi with palm-leaf manuscript and stylus, simple yantra-like calendar marks, serene scholarly ambience.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting, ornate frame, gold-leaf haloed dawn disc, a jyotiṣi in white dhoti holding a palm-leaf almanac, gold embellishment on manuscript edges, symbolic time divisions shown as labeled panels.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting style, fine linework, instructional tableau: graded timeline (6 months, 3 months, half-month, 10 days) written on a board, dawn background, calm teacher-figure pointing to aruṇodaya.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, detailed dawn landscape, scholar in a pavilion with astrolabe/palm-leaf, attendants, marginal notes showing time intervals, delicate pastel sky transitioning at sunrise."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"instructional","suggested_raga":"Bhairav","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: षड्भिः + मासैः → षड्भिर्मासैः; त्रिभिः + मासैः → त्रिभिर्मासैः; चतुर्थे तु + अर्धमासेन → चतुर्थे त्वर्धमासेन; दशाहात् + अरुणोदये → दशाहादरुणोदये.
Related Themes: Agni Purana 228 (Jyotiṣa—kāla-nirṇaya, śakuna, svapna, lakṣaṇa sections)
It gives a graded time-to-attainment scheme for a practice/observance, specifying durations (six months, three months, half-month, ten days) and highlighting aruṇodaya (dawn) as a crucial performance window.
By cataloging practical time-reckoning and performance standards—typical of Jyotiṣa/Muhūrta material—the text functions as a handbook that links ritual efficacy to calendrical and daily time divisions.
It implies that disciplined observance aligned with auspicious time (especially dawn) accelerates spiritual results, presenting time-discipline as a purifier and merit-enhancer.