Somārcana — Worship and Pacification of Soma (Moon) within Graha-Rites
अहर्निशं सुधावृष्टिं देहे वर्षत्यधोमुखः । जंतवस्तेन जीवंति महासत्वानुमात्रकाः
aharniśaṃ sudhāvṛṣṭiṃ dehe varṣatyadhomukhaḥ | jaṃtavastena jīvaṃti mahāsatvānumātrakāḥ
ผู้หันหน้าลงนั้น โปรยฝนสุธา (น้ำอมฤต) ลงสู่กายของตนทั้งกลางวันและกลางคืน ด้วยเหตุนั้นสรรพชีวิตจึงดำรงอยู่—ตามส่วนแห่งมหาสัตตะของตนแต่ละตน
Unspecified (context-dependent within Adhyaya 80; likely narration within a dialogue frame such as Pulastya → Bhīṣma in Sṛṣṭikhaṇḍa)
Concept: Life is sustained by a higher, subtle nourishment (soma/nectar) that descends continuously; beings live according to their own capacity (sattva/ojas).
Application: Cultivate gratitude and restraint: recognize that vitality is a trust; protect sources of nourishment (food, water, sleep) and avoid squandering ojas through excess.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A vast night-sky mandala shows the Moon as a downward-facing chalice, pouring a fine rain of amṛta onto the world below. The nectar becomes shimmering threads that enter plants, animals, and humans, each receiving only as much as their inner vitality can hold.","primary_figures":["Candra (Soma)","personified Earth (Bhū-devī)","varied jīvas (humans, animals, birds)"],"setting":"Cosmic panorama above an earthly landscape of fields, forests, and a quiet village; the Moon centered in a circular halo like a ritual vessel.","lighting_mood":"moonlit","color_palette":["pearl white","indigo night","silver-blue","pale lotus pink","soft emerald"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Candra as a radiant deity within a circular moon-halo, tilted like a vessel raining amṛta in silver droplets onto Bhū-devī and living beings below; heavy gold leaf on the halo and ornaments, rich crimson and emerald borders, gem-studded jewelry, stylized clouds and lotuses, South Indian iconographic symmetry.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: lyrical Himalayan night landscape with delicate brushwork; a serene anthropomorphic Moon-deity above, pouring fine nectar-rain onto terraced fields and forest creatures; cool indigo and silver palette, refined faces, soft mist, tiny stars, poetic naturalism.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines and natural pigments; Candra with large expressive eyes in a circular aura, amṛta-rain rendered as rhythmic white strokes; Bhū-devī and flora/fauna in layered registers; dominant reds, yellows, greens with deep blue background, temple-wall composition.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: moon-mandala above a lotus-filled landscape; amṛta droplets as pearl-like motifs; intricate floral borders, stylized cows, birds, and vines receiving nourishment; deep indigo ground with gold and white detailing, ornate textile symmetry."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"serene","sound_elements":["soft temple bells","night insects","distant flowing water","gentle tanpura drone","silence between lines"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: अहर्निशम् = अहः + निशम् (द्वन्द्व, अव्ययीभाववत् प्रयोगः); वर्षत्यधोमुखः = वर्षति + अधोमुखः; जंतवस्तेन = जन्तवः + तेन; जीवंति = जीवन्ति; महासत्वानुमात्रकाः = महासत्त्व + अणु + मात्रकाः (समास/सन्धि).
The verse uses a descriptive epithet rather than a proper name. In Purāṇic cosmological imagery, such terms can refer to a particular cosmic form or locus from which sustaining essence “flows downward.” Identifying the exact referent requires the surrounding verses of Adhyaya 80.
“Sudhā” (nectar) commonly symbolizes life-sustaining essence—divine nourishment, vitality, or the subtle support that maintains beings. The imagery conveys that existence is sustained continuously by a higher, subtle influx rather than by gross means alone.
It implies that receptivity and capacity matter: beings benefit from sustaining grace according to their inherent strength, preparedness, or cultivated vitality (sattva). This can be read as encouragement toward self-cultivation—purity, discipline, and virtue—to increase one’s capacity to receive and sustain life.