रम्भा
प्रलोभनम् — Rambhā’s Temptation and Viśvāmitra’s Curse
त्वं हि रूपं बहुगुणं कृत्वा परमभास्वरम्।तमृषिं कौशिकं रम्भे भेदयस्व तपस्विनम्।।1.64.7।।
tvaṃ hi rūpaṃ bahuguṇaṃ kṛtvā paramabhāsvaram |
tam ṛṣiṃ kauśikaṃ rambhe bhedayasva tapasvinam || 1.64.7 ||
“蓝婆啊,你当化作极其光耀、具足诸般媚丽之相,去扰乱那苦行的圣者——牟尼考释迦——使其禅定破散。”
'O Rambha! have no fear. Feel safe. Carry out my order. When the trees look so beautiful in spring I shall in captivating the form of a cuckoo, stay by your side in the company of Kamadeva (Cupid).
The verse foregrounds the dharmic challenge of sense-control: spiritual effort is tested by external allurements, and dharma requires steadiness against deliberate distraction.
Indra explicitly commands Rambhā to use beauty and charm to break Viśvāmitra’s austerity.
By implication, the virtue at stake is tapas (disciplined self-restraint) in Viśvāmitra—precisely what Indra seeks to undermine.