Durvasa’s Curse, the Churning of the Ocean, and Lakshmi’s Manifestation
Chapter 4
मदांधकारिताक्षोसौ गंधाघ्राणेन वारणः । करेणादाय चिक्षेप तां मालां पृथिवीतले
madāṃdhakāritākṣosau gaṃdhāghrāṇena vāraṇaḥ | kareṇādāya cikṣepa tāṃ mālāṃ pṛthivītale
ช้างนั้นมีดวงตาถูกความมืดแห่งความเมามัวปกคลุม ได้ดมกลิ่นหอมแล้วใช้ งวงคว้าพวงมาลา โยนลงสู่พื้นพิภพ
Narrator (contextual narrator within Sṛṣṭikhaṇḍa; specific dialogue-speaker not identifiable from the single verse alone)
Concept: Mada (intoxication of power/pleasure) clouds discernment and leads to disrespect of the sacred, producing downfall.
Application: When praised or empowered, pause before acting; avoid dismissing gifts, counsel, or sacred items—especially in public or in anger.
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Airāvata, eyes half-lidded and wild with intoxication, curls his trunk around the fragrant garland and flings it down. The flowers scatter across the jeweled floor like fallen stars, while the atmosphere tightens with the sense of an unseen curse approaching.","primary_figures":["Airāvata","Indra","Durvāsā (at the edge, witnessing)"],"setting":"Celestial assembly hall with polished stone/jeweled pavement; courtiers recoiling; the garland striking the ground in slow-motion emphasis","lighting_mood":"dramatic","color_palette":["storm gray","marigold orange","crimson","ivory white","antique gold"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Airāvata in dynamic pose, trunk mid-swing casting a bright garland onto the ornate floor; Indra startled, courtiers frozen; heavy gold leaf on jewelry and pillars, rich reds and greens; scattered blossoms rendered with embossed highlights to emphasize sacrilege and impending curse.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: crisp narrative moment—garland arcing through the air, petals drifting; subtle expressions of shock; cool blues and grays with warm flower tones; delicate architectural lines and patterned carpets; Durvāsā’s austere figure hinted at the margin.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: stylized elephant with emphatic eye shapes showing mada; garland as rhythmic floral chain breaking into motifs on the ground; bold outlines, flat yet powerful color blocks; background pillars and attendants simplified for moral clarity.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: symbolic composition—garland falling amid lotus motifs that appear ‘wilted’ in pattern; deep indigo field with gold borders; narrative figures arranged like a temple festival tableau; intricate floral scatter pattern emphasizing the fall of śrī."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"fast-dramatic","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["sudden silence","heavy footfall/impact","murmurs of devas","distant thunder"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: madāṃdhakāritākṣosau = mada + andha + kārita + akṣaḥ + asau; gaṃdhāghrāṇena = gandha + āghrāṇena; kareṇādāya = kareṇa + ādāya; pṛthivītale = pṛthivī + tale.
An intoxicated elephant smells a garland, takes it with its trunk, and throws it down onto the ground.
It suggests that intoxication (and by extension arrogance or heedlessness) clouds perception and leads to disrespectful or harmful actions.
Not directly; it is a narrative moment. Any Bhakti or tirtha significance would depend on the surrounding episode and characters in the broader chapter context.