The Tale of Sukalā: Testing Pativratā Fidelity and the Body-as-House Teaching
प्राणिनां हि कपालेषु कृमयः संति पंच वै । द्वावेतौ कर्णमूले तु नेत्रस्थाने ततः पुनः
prāṇināṃ hi kapāleṣu kṛmayaḥ saṃti paṃca vai | dvāvetau karṇamūle tu netrasthāne tataḥ punaḥ
Tunay nga, sa mga bungo ng mga nilalang ay sinasabing may limang uri ng uod: dalawa sa ugat ng mga tainga, at muli, (ang iba) sa dako ng mga mata.
Unspecified (verse presented without surrounding dialogue context)
Concept: The body, even the head that houses pride and identity, is subject to impurity and decay; recognizing this supports vairāgya and spiritual urgency.
Application: Use contemplation of impermanence to reduce vanity, anger, and sensual obsession; redirect attention to nāma-japa, sattvic diet, and vrata observance.
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A sage points to a symbolic skull resting on a clean cloth, while faint, stylized ‘five worms’ appear as subtle, almost calligraphic forms near the ear-roots and eye-sockets. The scene is not gruesome but instructive—an allegory of hidden decay beneath outward beauty, urging the viewer toward detachment and devotion.","primary_figures":["a teaching sage","a listener (disciple or ‘bhadre’ figure implied)","symbolic skull (kapāla)"],"setting":"hermitage teaching space with palm-leaf manuscripts, water pot, and a small Viṣṇu emblem in the background","lighting_mood":"lamp-lit with contemplative shadows","color_palette":["bone ivory","saffron ochre","ink black","muted vermilion","smoky brown"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a seated ṛṣi instructing a disciple, a stylized kapāla on a pedestal, five tiny ornamental worm-motifs rendered as gold-leaf curls near ear and eye positions; rich red backdrop, heavy gold borders, devotional Viṣṇu symbol (śaṅkha-cakra) in a corner medallion.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: quiet hermitage interior, sage gesturing toward a skull as a moral emblem; delicate lines, restrained depiction of worms as faint ink motifs, cool subdued palette, refined expressions conveying sober instruction.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines of sage and disciple, kapāla centrally placed, worm-forms stylized like decorative serpentine strokes; warm ochres and reds, temple-wall aesthetic, didactic composition.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: allegorical panel where the kapāla sits amid lotus borders; the ‘worms’ appear as patterned motifs rather than realism; deep indigo ground with gold and white highlights, devotional framing with small Viṣṇu insignia and floral vines."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["low tanpura drone","soft mridangam pulse","night insects","temple lamp crackle"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: द्वावेतौ = द्वौ + एतौ (स्वर-सन्धि). नेत्रयोरंतरस्थितौ (अगले श्लोक में) = नेत्रयोः + अन्तरस्थितौ (विसर्ग/स्वर-सन्धि).
It gives a didactic, body-focused observation describing five kinds of “kṛmi” (worms/organisms) associated with the skull area, specifying locations near the ears and eyes.
In Purāṇic teaching, such anatomical or bodily descriptions often support reflection on the body’s fragility and impurity, encouraging detachment and ethical living rather than bodily pride.
From the single verse alone, the speaker cannot be reliably identified; Padma Purana sections frequently occur within dialogues (e.g., Pulastya–Bhīṣma), but attribution requires the surrounding verses.