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Shloka 56

The Five Great Sacrifices: Supremacy of Honoring Parents, Pativrata Dharma, Truthfulness, and Śrāddha

विपत्सु मंत्रिणी भर्तुः सा च भार्या पतिव्रता । भर्तुराज्ञां न लंघेद्या मनो वाक्कायकर्मभिः

vipatsu maṃtriṇī bhartuḥ sā ca bhāryā pativratā | bharturājñāṃ na laṃghedyā mano vākkāyakarmabhiḥ

مصیبت کے وقت وہ شوہر کی مشیر بن کر خدمت کرے؛ اور پتی ورتا بیوی بن کر دل، زبان اور جسمانی عمل سے شوہر کے حکم کی ہرگز خلاف ورزی نہ کرے۔

vipatsuin misfortunes, in crises
vipatsu:
mantriṇīcounsellor/adviser
mantriṇī:
bhartuḥof the husband
bhartuḥ:
she
:
caand
ca:
bhāryāwife
bhāryā:
pativratādevoted to her husband (faithful in vow)
pativratā:
bhartur-ājñāmthe husband’s command
bhartur-ājñām:
nanot
na:
laṅghedyāshould transgress/overstep
laṅghedyā:
manaḥmind
manaḥ:
vākspeech
vāk:
kāyabody
kāya:
karmabhiḥby actions/deeds
karmabhiḥ:

Unspecified (context not provided in the input excerpt)

Concept: Devotion in marriage includes intelligent support during calamity and disciplined non-transgression of agreed authority—purity of mind, speech, and action.

Application: In family crises, become a calm advisor rather than a critic; practice alignment of intention, speech, and behavior to reduce harm and build trust.

Primary Rasa: shanta

Secondary Rasa: vira

Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A storm-darkened household courtyard: the husband appears troubled by calamity—messengers, scattered accounts, anxious servants—while the wife stands beside him, composed, offering counsel with a palm-leaf ledger and a lit lamp symbolizing clarity. Her face shows firm compassion; her gestures indicate restraint, as if guarding speech and action from rashness.","primary_figures":["Pativratā wife as counselor","Husband in distress","Household attendants/messengers"],"setting":"Courtyard or inner hall with rain clouds outside, documents, oil lamp, small shrine niche in the background.","lighting_mood":"forest dappled","color_palette":["storm gray","lamp gold","maroon","peacock blue","sage green"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: crisis scene in a noble household—husband seated amid signs of calamity, wife standing with a lamp and counsel gesture; gold-leaf aura around the lamp and shrine, rich maroons and greens, ornate jewelry, stylized architecture, devotional undertone with a small Viṣṇu icon in the background.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: intimate narrative of adversity—soft rain-washed palette, delicate expressions; the wife offers calm counsel, holding a small lamp; refined interior with patterned rugs, distant hills and rain through an archway, lyrical realism and gentle emotional restraint.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines and dramatic posture—wife as steady counselor, husband anxious; strong red/yellow/green pigments, stylized eyes, rhythmic composition, lamp as central motif, shrine niche with Vaishnava symbols.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: symbolic rendering—lamp of dharma at center, lotus borders, subtle Krishna/Śauri motifs; the couple framed by floral patterns and peacocks, deep blue background with gold highlights, narrative panels showing ‘vipad’ turning into ‘śānti’."}

Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["distant thunder","rainfall","temple bell single strikes","low drone","brief silence between pādas"]}

FAQs

It teaches household dharma: in adversity a wife supports her husband with counsel and remains disciplined in thought, speech, and action, avoiding deliberate disobedience or harm to marital order.

It is a classical triad indicating total ethical restraint: not only outward actions, but also one’s words and inner intentions should align with dharmic conduct.

No. This shloka is a moral instruction about marital conduct and does not reference gods, tīrthas, or locations in the provided text.