Mantra-śakti, Dūta-Carā (Envoys & Spies), Vyasana (Calamities), and the Sapta-Upāya of Nīti
अनयाद्व्यस्यति श्रेयस्तस्मात्तद्व्यसनं स्मृतं हुताशनो जलं व्याधिर्दुर्भिक्षं मरकं तथा
anayādvyasyati śreyastasmāttadvyasanaṃ smṛtaṃ hutāśano jalaṃ vyādhirdurbhikṣaṃ marakaṃ tathā
جس سے شریَس (فلاح و بہبود) درہم برہم ہو جائے، وہی ‘ویسن’ (آفت) کہلاتا ہے۔ یہ ہیں: آگ، پانی (سیلاب)، بیماری، قحط، اور مرَک (وبا سے اموات)۔
Lord Agni (in dialogue, instructing the sage Vasiṣṭha)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Arthashastra","secondary_vidya":"Dharmashastra","practical_application":"Public administration and disaster taxonomy: defining ‘vyasana’ and enumerating key calamities to plan prevention, relief, and continuity of governance.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Definition","entry_title":"Definition and Fivefold List of Calamities (Vyasana)","lookup_keywords":["vyasana","daiva-apada","anaya","dur-bhiksha","maraka"],"quick_summary":"A calamity is whatever throws welfare into disorder. The text lists five major public threats—fire, flood, disease, famine, and epidemic mortality—forming a governance checklist for preparedness."}
Concept: Śreyas (welfare) is a measurable public good; threats to it are to be named, classified, and countered.
Application: Use the fivefold list as an administrative register: prevention plans, stockpiles, medical readiness, and rapid-response protocols.
Khanda Section: Rajadharma / Artha-shastra (Calamities and public welfare; vyasana-nirupana)
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A panoramic depiction of five calamities affecting a realm: a city quarter ablaze, swollen river flooding fields, patients tended by healers, empty granaries during famine, and a funeral procession during epidemic mortality.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural, segmented tableau of five disasters around a central emblem of the kingdom, stylized flames, waves, healers with herbs, gaunt figures near granary, mourners; bold contours and symbolic composition","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting, central protective deity motif optional but non-iconic focus on calamity scenes in medallions, gold leaf borders, rich reds and greens, clear narrative panels for fire/flood/disease/famine/epidemic","mysore_prompt":"Mysore style, instructional infographic-like painting with five labeled vignettes (hutashana, jala, vyadhi, durbhiksha, maraka), delicate shading, calm didactic tone","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, detailed landscape with river inundation, urban fire brigade line, physicians examining patients, famine market with high prices, epidemic funeral; fine brushwork and realism"}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Todi","pace":"slow","voice_tone":"contemplative"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: anayādvyasyati → anayāt + vyasyati; śreyastasmāt → śreyaḥ + tasmāt; vyādhirdurbhikṣaṃ → vyādhiḥ + durbhikṣam.
Related Themes: Agni Purana Rajadharma sections on apad-dharma and governance in crisis; Agni Purana material on śānti rites (for daiva causes)
It gives an administrative definition of vyasana (calamity) and enumerates key crisis-types—fire, flood, disease, famine, and epidemic death—used for governance and public welfare planning.
By treating statecraft and social resilience as formal knowledge: it classifies disasters in a concise taxonomy, aligning the Purana with Artha-shastra-like concerns (public health, food security, and emergency conditions).
It frames calamities as forces that disrupt śreyas (human welfare), encouraging rulers and householders to respond through dharmic protection and relief, thereby preserving order and merit through compassionate action.