Daksha’s Sacrifice and the Origin of Kapalin Rudra (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)
पराजिते लोकपतौ देवेन परमेष्षिना क्रोधान्धकारितं रुद्रं पञ्चमो ऽथ मुखो ऽब्रोवीत्
parājite lokapatau devena parameṣṣinā krodhāndhakāritaṃ rudraṃ pañcamo 'tha mukho 'brovīt
เมื่อเจ้าแห่งโลกทั้งหลายถูกเทพผู้สูงสุดพิชิตแล้ว พระพักตร์ที่ห้าจึงตรัสกับรุทระผู้ถูกความพิโรธทำให้มืดบอด
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "raudra", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Anger is portrayed as ‘darkness’ that eclipses discernment even in exalted beings; cosmic order is restored through higher counsel rather than escalation.
This aligns most closely with pratisarga/secondary cosmic ordering and devasura-related narration (rakṣā/saṃsthā), rather than sarga alone; it situates a deity’s function within the maintained cosmos.
The ‘fifth face’ motif suggests a regulating, higher perspective that restrains destructive fury; it also supports the Purāṇic theme that divine powers are coordinated within a single cosmic sovereignty.