Adhyaya 51 — Yaksha Injunctions: Graha-Children and Female Spirits Causing Domestic and Ritual Disruptions
कुर्यादारम्भमुप्तिं च हृष्टतुष्टः सहायवान् ।
नियोजिकेति या कन्या दुःसहस्य मयोदिता ॥
जातं प्रचोदिकासंज्ञं तस्याः कन्याचतुष्टयम् ।
मत्तोन्मत्तप्रमत्तास्तु नरान् नारीस्तु ताः सदा ॥
kuryād ārambham uptiṃ ca hṛṣṭa-tuṣṭaḥ sahāya-vān / niyojiketi yā kanyā duḥsahasya mayoditā // jātaṃ pracodikā-saṃjñaṃ tasyāḥ kanyā-catuṣṭayam / mattonmatta-pramattās tu narān nārīs tu tāḥ sadā
Dapat simulan ang mga gawain, pati ang paghahasik, nang may galak, kasiyahan, at may mga katuwang na sumusuporta. Ang dalagang tinawag na Niyojikā—na sinabi kong nauukol kay Duḥsaha—ay nagsilang ng isang nagngangalang Pracodikā; at mula sa kanya ay lumitaw ang apat na dalaga, na laging lasing, nagwawala, at pabaya, at patuloy na nagtutulak sa mga lalaki at babae tungo sa kapahamakan.
{ "primaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Auspicious action requires inner readiness (joy/contentment) and proper support; by contrast, ‘inciters’ and their heedless offshoots allegorize impulses that push people into rash, destructive choices.
Falls under ācāra/dharma and upākhyāna-style moral teaching rather than sarga/pratisarga/vaṃśa/manvantara/vaṃśānucarita.
The genealogy of personified forces suggests a chain-reaction model: subtle ‘appointment/engagement’ (niyojikā) becomes ‘provocation’ (pracodikā), which multiplies into intoxication, frenzy, and negligence—stages of loss of discrimination (viveka).