The Tale of Sukalā: Testing Pativratā Fidelity and the Body-as-House Teaching
किं पुनः कामिनीं देव यस्या अंगे न वै बलम् । कामिनीनामहं देव अंगेषु निवसाम्यहम्
kiṃ punaḥ kāminīṃ deva yasyā aṃge na vai balam | kāminīnāmahaṃ deva aṃgeṣu nivasāmyaham
“ยิ่งกว่านั้นสตรีผู้ถูกกามครอบงำเล่า โอ้เทพเจ้า ผู้ซึ่งในอวัยวะย่อมไร้เรี่ยวแรง โอ้เทพเจ้า เราสถิตอยู่ในอวัยวะแห่งสตรีผู้กำหนัดทั้งหลาย”
Uncertain from single-verse context (a personified force—likely Kāma/desire—addressing a deity as 'deva')
Concept: Desire operates as an indwelling force that exploits weakness; recognizing its ‘residence’ is the first step to mastery.
Application: Notice where and how attraction manifests (gaze, touch, imagination); apply counter-practices—mantra, mindful boundaries, and sattvic routines—before it becomes compulsion.
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: raudra
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A semi-transparent, personified Kāma speaks like a whispering presence, his form dissolving into the contours of a human silhouette—suggesting indwelling temptation. The scene is intentionally unsettling: desire is shown not as romance but as an invasive force that claims residence in the body’s vulnerable places.","primary_figures":["Kandarpa (Kāma)","symbolic human figure (amorous woman as archetype)","a listening ‘deva’ figure (off-screen or in shadow)"],"setting":"Symbolic inner-space: a darkened chamber blending into anatomical/lotus-like patterns","lighting_mood":"moonlit","color_palette":["indigo","smoky gray","deep maroon","pale silver","faded rose"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: allegorical composition—Kāma with sugarcane bow rendered with gold leaf but partially translucent, merging into a stylized human form; ornate yet ominous, rich maroons and indigos, gold highlights on jewelry, temple-arch framing that contrasts sacred style with unsettling theme.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: subtle, psychological scene—Kāma as a delicate figure fading into shadow, a veiled woman’s silhouette, cool nocturnal palette, fine linework, minimal background with lotus-petal motifs suggesting inner mind-space.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines of Kāma and a stylized human figure; flat fields of indigo and maroon, expressive eyes, symbolic lotus/anatomical motifs, temple-wall aesthetic emphasizing moral allegory.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: symbolic border of lotuses and vines enclosing a central silhouette; Kāma’s floral arrows become curling creepers wrapping the figure; deep blue ground with muted gold, intricate patterning that conveys entanglement."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Todi","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"emotional","sound_elements":["low drone","soft thunder in distance","rustling silk","sudden hush"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: yasyā + aṃge → yasyā aṃge (no coalescence in given reading); kāminīnām + aham → kāminīnāmaham (mā + a → mā); nivasāmi + aham → nivasāmyaham (i + a → ya).
It states that a passion-driven person—here, specifically an amorous woman—is physically and mentally overpowered, and that desire (kāma) is said to ‘reside’ in such persons, intensifying their vulnerability.
From the phrasing “I dwell…” the speaker appears to be a personified principle (most plausibly Kāma, desire) addressing an unnamed “deva.” Exact identification needs surrounding verses.
The verse underscores the need for self-restraint and vigilance over desire, implying that when kāma dominates, one’s strength and steadiness diminish.