Śuka’s Origin, Mastery of Śāstra, and Testing at Janaka’s Court
स तामप्सरसं दृष्ट्वा सहसा काममोहितः । अभवद्भगवान्व्यासो वने तस्मिन्मुनीश्वर ॥ २० ॥
sa tāmapsarasaṃ dṛṣṭvā sahasā kāmamohitaḥ | abhavadbhagavānvyāso vane tasminmunīśvara || 20 ||
اُس اپسرا کو دیکھ کر، اے سردارِ مُنیان، اسی جنگل میں بھگوان ویاس اچانک خواہشِ نفس کے فریب میں مبتلا اور مُوہوم ہو گئے۔
Narada (narrating to the Sanatkumara brothers)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shringara
It highlights that even a revered sage can be momentarily shaken by kāma, underscoring the Purāṇic emphasis on vigilance, self-mastery, and vairāgya as essential supports for mokṣa.
By showing the destabilizing power of desire, it indirectly points to bhakti as a stabilizing refuge—keeping the mind anchored in the Lord when sensory fascination arises.
No specific Vedāṅga technique is taught in this line; the practical takeaway is ethical-psychological discipline (dama/indriya-nigraha) that supports all śāstric practice and sādhana.