कुन्देन्दुवज्रसङ्काशमुदरं चास्य भास्वरम्।मधूकनिभपार्श्वश्च पद्मकिञ्जल्कसन्निभः।।3.42.17।।वैडूर्यसङ्काशखुरस्तनुजङ्घस्सुसंहतः।
kundenduvajrasaṅkāśam udaraṃ cāsya bhāsvaram |
madhūkanibhapārśvaś ca padmakiñjalkasannibhaḥ ||3.42.17||
vaiḍūryasaṅkāśakhuras tanujaṅghaḥ susaṅhataḥ |
ท้องอันสว่างไสวของมันเปล่งประกายดุจดอกกุนทะ ดุจจันทร์ และดุจเพชร; สีข้างดุจดอกมธุคะ คล้ายเส้นใยเกสรบัว; กีบเท้าดุจไวฑูรยะ ขาเรียว และกายสมส่วนแน่นงาม
His bright belly was shining like kunda flowers or the Moon or diamond. His flanks were like the golden madhuka flowers. comparable to the filaments of lotus. His hooves were like vaidurya, and his legs were slim and will-shaped.
It reinforces the ethical warning: sensory brilliance can mask danger. Dharma-based living values truth and prudence over glittering attraction.
The poem elaborates the deer’s supernatural beauty, built from floral and gem comparisons, to show how compelling the lure was.
Prudence (apramāda) is the implied virtue—carefulness in judging what appears extraordinary.