Nara-Narayana’s Tapas, Indra’s Temptation, and the Burning of Kama: The Origin of Ananga and the Shiva-Linga Episode
रक्ताशोककरा तन्वी देवर्षे किशुकाङ्घ्रिका नीलाशोककचा श्यामा विकासिकमलानना
raktāśokakarā tanvī devarṣe kiśukāṅghrikā nīlāśokakacā śyāmā vikāsikamalānanā
O banal na rishi, siya’y payat at marikit; ang kanyang mga kamay ay tulad ng pulang bulaklak ng aśoka; ang kanyang mga paa ay tulad ng bulaklak na kiśuka (palāśa). Ang kanyang buhok ay tulad ng madilim-asul na aśoka; siya’y maitim ang kutis, at ang mukha’y gaya ng ganap na namukadkad na lotus.
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The passage models a Purāṇic aesthetic: perceiving the sacred through auspicious natural forms. Ethically, it cultivates reverence (śraddhā) and refined attention (bhāva) by linking beauty with divinity.
This is best classed under ancillary narrative/description within a māhātmya context rather than the core pañcalakṣaṇa topics; broadly it aligns with purāṇic upabṛṃhaṇa (devotional and descriptive expansion) supporting tīrtha-māhātmya.
Aśoka, kiśuka, and lotus are auspicious markers: aśoka suggests removal of sorrow (a-śoka), lotus indicates purity and spiritual unfolding, and the dark hue (śyāmā) often signals divine depth/attractiveness in classical iconography.