The Glory of Dhātrī (Āmalakī) and Tulasī: Ekādaśī Observance and Protection from Preta States
नग्नका रोगसंतप्ता मृता रूक्षा मलीमसाः । एते चान्ये च दुःखार्ताः सदैव प्रेतजातयः
nagnakā rogasaṃtaptā mṛtā rūkṣā malīmasāḥ | ete cānye ca duḥkhārtāḥ sadaiva pretajātayaḥ
เปลือยกาย ทนทุกข์ด้วยโรคภัย เสมือนคนตาย แห้งกรังและสกปรกโสโครก เหล่านี้และผู้ทนทุกข์อื่นๆ ล้วนจัดอยู่ในจำพวกเปรตตลอดไป
Unspecified in the provided excerpt (context needed from surrounding verses to identify the dialogue pair).
Concept: Adharmic living ripens into a preta-like existence marked by deprivation, impurity, and unfulfilled hunger.
Application: Cultivate cleanliness, compassion, and daily worship; avoid actions that degrade body and mind into tamas; perform śrāddha/charity for the distressed dead when appropriate.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A bleak liminal landscape between village outskirts and cremation ground: emaciated, dust-covered beings wander naked, their eyes hollow with unending thirst. The air feels heavy and stagnant, suggesting a karmic prison where desire persists without fulfillment.","primary_figures":["pretas (restless spirits)","a distant compassionate sage or priest (optional, observing)"],"setting":"śmaśāna edge with thorny scrub, broken pots, ash mounds, and a faint path leading away from human habitation","lighting_mood":"moonlit","color_palette":["ash gray","smoky black","pale bone white","dull ochre","cold silver"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a stark śmaśāna border scene with wandering pretas rendered symbolically, a small distant Viṣṇu-emblem (śaṅkha-cakra) in the sky as moral counterpoint, heavy gold leaf used sparingly as a divine contrast, rich maroon border, traditional ornamented framing despite the austere subject.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: a moonlit cremation-ground outskirts with delicate linework, thin gaunt figures in muted tones, sparse trees and rocky ground, cool grays and silvers, lyrical emptiness, refined faces showing fear and sorrow, distant village lamps barely visible.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines and earthy pigments depicting the preta-condition as allegorical figures—sunken eyes, dry limbs—set against a stylized śmaśāna with simplified flames and ash, strong ochre/black/gray contrasts, temple-wall aesthetic moral tableau.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: an allegorical composition where the lower register shows pretas in subdued grays, while the upper register features a lotus-and-tulasi border and a small central Viṣṇu symbol in deep blue and gold, intricate floral margins emphasizing the path from impurity to devotion."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["low temple bell","distant wind","cremation-ground silence","occasional conch (as moral punctuation)"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: चान्ये → च अन्ये; सदैव → सदा एव
The verse describes pretas as restless post-death beings marked by distress—depicted as naked, disease-stricken, withered, and unclean—indicating an afflicted state of existence.
It underscores that harmful actions and neglected duties can lead to miserable conditions, encouraging righteous conduct, compassion, and proper observances for wellbeing in life and beyond.
Not explicitly. It functions more as a warning about suffering and karmic consequence; in broader Purāṇic framing, such warnings often motivate turning toward dharma and devotional practice, but that requires surrounding context.