Adhyaya 16 — The Son’s Counsel on Renunciation and the Anasuya–Mandavya Episode: The Suspension of Sunrise and the Power of Pativrata
संसारादित्यतापार्तिविप्लुष्यद्देहमांससम् ।
ब्रह्मज्ञानाम्बुशीतॆन सिञ्च मां वाक्यवारिणा ॥
saṃsārāditya-tāpārti-vipluṣyad-deha-mānasam |
brahma-jñānāmbu-śītena siñca māṃ vākya-vāriṇā ||
Ang aking katawan at isipan ay napapaso, na wari’y tumutulo at nauubos, dahil sa mapanakit na init ng araw ng saṃsāra. Wisikan mo ako ng malamig na tubig ng kaalaman sa Brahman—sa pamamagitan ng ulan ng iyong mga salita.
{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Knowledge is presented as a direct remedy for existential suffering; the ethical impulse is compassion through instruction—speech used as a salvific instrument.
Didactic/soteriological content (mokṣa-upadeśa), not pañcalakṣaṇa narration.
The ‘sun of saṃsāra’ symbolizes the relentless exposure of consciousness to desire and fear; ‘cool water’ is the settling clarity of non-dual insight that ends burning reactivity.