Chanda and Munda Discover Katyayani; Mahishasura’s Proposal and the Vishnu-Panjara Protection
श्रुत्वाथ वाक्यं मयजो ऽब्रवीच्च शुल्कं वदस्वाम्बुजपत्रनेत्रे दद्यात्स्वमूर्धानमपि त्वदर्थे किं नाम शुल्कं यदिहैव तभ्यम्
śrutvātha vākyaṃ mayajo 'bravīcca śulkaṃ vadasvāmbujapatranetre dadyātsvamūrdhānamapi tvadarthe kiṃ nāma śulkaṃ yadihaiva tabhyam
ครั้นได้ฟังถ้อยคำแล้ว บุตรแห่งมายาตอบว่า: “จงบอกศุลกะเถิด โอ้ผู้มีนัยน์ตาดุจกลีบบัว เพื่อท่านข้ายอมมอบแม้ศีรษะของตน แล้วศุลกะนั้นคือสิ่งใด จงบอก ณ ที่นี้เดี๋ยวนี้”
{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "shringara", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Desire is disciplined by obligation: the daitya’s intensity is redirected into a vow-like readiness to meet conditions. The ethical lesson is that commitment is proven by willingness to bear cost, not by boasts of dominion.
Vaṃśānucarita (episode narrative) with a didactic overlay about dharma in social contracts. It remains within the story-layer rather than cosmological categories.
Offering one’s head is a hyperbolic symbol of ego-surrender, foreshadowing a theme common in Purāṇas: true ‘worthiness’ is measured by submission to a higher order (dharma/daivī-śakti), not merely martial success.