The Slaying of Vṛtrāsura
अस्त्रं निरस्तकं दृष्ट्वा स दैत्यः क्रोधमूर्च्छितः । मायया शैलसंदोहमस्त्रं शक्रे मुमोच ह
astraṃ nirastakaṃ dṛṣṭvā sa daityaḥ krodhamūrcchitaḥ | māyayā śailasaṃdohamastraṃ śakre mumoca ha
اپنا ہتھیار بے اثر دیکھ کر وہ دَیتیہ غصّے کی بے ہوشی میں ڈوب گیا؛ پھر اپنی مایا کے زور سے پہاڑوں کے انبار جیسا ایک استر شکر (اِندر) پر چھوڑ دیا۔
Narrator (within the Adhyaya’s battle account; specific dialogue-speaker not explicit in this verse)
Concept: When ego is thwarted, anger seeks larger, more destructive means; māyā can magnify harm when guided by resentment.
Application: Notice the ‘anger-swoon’ moment—when plans fail, avoid doubling down with harsher tactics; choose restraint and clarity.
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A daitya, eyes reddened and body trembling, reels in an anger-induced swoon as his earlier weapon fails. Recovering, he unleashes a māyā-born missile that manifests as a tumbling avalanche of jagged mountains hurtling through the sky toward Śakra.","primary_figures":["Daitya (asura)","Śakra/Indra (targeted)","Māyā-formed mountain mass"],"setting":"Sky over battlefield; distant Indra’s chariot with banner; mountains appearing midair like a collapsing range.","lighting_mood":"thunderous","color_palette":["storm blue","basalt black","lightning white","rust red","ashen gold"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: depict the enraged daitya with exaggerated expression and ornate armor, Indra in a small but regal chariot; the mountain-missile as a sculpted, layered form highlighted with gold leaf edges; rich reds/greens for garments, gem-like detailing, and a dramatic lightning-streaked sky.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: a lyrical yet tense scene—Indra’s chariot in the upper corner, the daitya below releasing a swirling mass of miniature gray-blue peaks; fine linework for crags, delicate lightning, and expressive but refined faces; cool palette with sharp white highlights.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines for the daitya’s posture of release, Indra frontal with iconic crown; the mountain mass stylized as repeating triangular forms; strong reds/yellows/greens with black contouring, temple-wall symmetry and rhythmic patterning.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: the mountain-missile rendered as a decorative cascade of stylized peaks and floral-rock motifs; ornate borders with flame patterns; Indra’s banner and parasol simplified into emblematic forms; deep blue ground with gold and vermilion accents."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairav","pace":"fast-dramatic","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["thunder","war drums","conch shell","rockfall rumble","battle cries"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: शैलसंदोहम् + अस्त्रम् → शैलसंदोहमस्त्रम् (म् + अ → म). क्रोधमूर्च्छितः = क्रोध + मूर्च्छित (तत्पुरुष).
A demon, enraged after seeing his prior weapon neutralized, uses māyā (magical power) to hurl a mountain-mass projectile at Śakra (Indra).
Māyā is depicted as a force that can transform the nature of an attack—here, turning a missile into an overwhelming ‘heap of mountains,’ emphasizing deceptive or supernormal power in cosmic conflicts.
It suggests that anger can cloud judgment and drive escalation; the demon’s fury leads him to resort to extreme, destructive measures rather than restraint or clarity.