Sukeshi’s Inquiry into Dharma: The Seven Dvipas and the Twenty-One Hells
तां बाणवृष्टिमतुलां दण्डेनाहत्य भास्करिः शातयित्वा प्रचिक्षेप दण्डं लोकभयङ्करम्
tāṃ bāṇavṛṣṭimatulāṃ daṇḍenāhatya bhāskariḥ śātayitvā pracikṣepa daṇḍaṃ lokabhayaṅkaram
Si Bhāskari (ang may liwanag ng araw) ay hinampas ng kanyang tungkod ang di-mapapantayang ulan ng mga palaso; matapos itong durugin, inihagis niya ang tungkod na yaon—nakapanghihilakbot sa mga daigdig.
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Disciplined power (daṇḍa) is portrayed as the means to neutralize overwhelming aggression; the ‘daṇḍa’ also evokes righteous restraint and corrective authority rather than mere retaliation.
As with the prior verse, this is narrative material (Vaṃśānucarita/Carita style) embedded in mythic-historical conflict, not cosmogenesis (sarga) or dissolution (pralaya) proper.
The daṇḍa signifies dharma’s enforcing principle—order that can ‘break’ chaos. The phrase ‘lokabhayaṅkara’ frames this force as awe-inspiring cosmic authority, akin to royal punishment (rājadaṇḍa) on a universal scale.