The Exposition of the Maheśa Mantra
Mahēśa-mantra-prakāśana
कूजत्कोकिलसंघेन मुखरीकृतदिङ्मुखे । परस्परविनिर्मुक्तमात्सर्यमृगसेविते ॥ १३६ ॥
kūjatkokilasaṃghena mukharīkṛtadiṅmukhe | parasparavinirmuktamātsaryamṛgasevite || 136 ||
جہاں کوئلوں کے جھنڈ کی کوک سے ہر سمت گونج اٹھتی ہے، اور جہاں ہرن باہمی حسد سے آزاد ہو کر بےخوف پھرتے ہیں۔
Narada (descriptive narration within the dialogue tradition)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta (peace)
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta (wonder)
It presents the dharmic ideal of a sattvic environment where even animals are portrayed as free from jealousy, pointing to the inner virtue of amātsarya (non-envy) as a mark of spiritual refinement.
By emphasizing freedom from envy and a peaceful, harmonious atmosphere, it supports bhakti as a purity-of-heart discipline—devotion matures where matsarya is abandoned and the mind becomes gentle and receptive.
While not a technical Vedanga rule, it reflects the applied dharmic outcome expected from Vedic training—cultivating sattva and ethical restraint—often taught alongside disciplines like Vyakarana and Shiksha in a gurukula setting.