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© 2012 - 2024, Swetha Sundaram The articles on this blog are a collection of the author's studies and/or inferences made by the author from such studies. The posts on the vedic civilizations and symbolisms in vedic texts is the result of intense study undertaken by the author and the inferences made by the author from these studies. Please ensure to cite this blog if using material from this blog.

Monday, 19 January 2026

Swan Lake (King Pururavas & Urvasi) – A Poignant Love Story Replete with Solar Symbolism

 

Humans have worshipped the Sun from time immemorial. The Sun is the giver of life through light and heat. It is hence not surprising that solar symbolism should find its way into literary sources from around the world.

The famous opera Swan Lake is but a parallel of the love story of King Pururavas & Urvasi. Both versions are poignant love stories replete with Solar Symbolism, in which the hero wanders in search of his lost love.

The Swan Lake:

Briefly, The Swan Lake is a tragic love story of Prince Siegfried and Princess Odette. The couple are cursed by the sorcerer Rothbart to be a swan by day and a human by night. The curse of Rothbart could only be broken by true love.  Rothbart plays a further trick upon Siegfried by creating a doppelgänger of Odette called Odile (the Black Swan).  Mistaking Odile for Odette, Siegfried pledges his love to Odile, dooming Odette. In the end, Siegfried locates Odette at the lake. The story often ends with the two dying in a lake.

The Story of King Pururavas & Urvasi

In this story, Urvasi agrees to stay with Pururavas as long as he appears before her in his royal robe. Urvasi has two pet goats that are tied to her couch. Seeing that she has been gone from the celestial world for a very long time, the Gandharvas play a trick upon the couple by kidnapping Urvasi’s goats. When Urvasi cries for Pururavas’s help, he steps up, but without his royal robe, thus breaking his promise to Urvasi. Having lost Urvasi, Pururavas wanders across the battlefield of Kurukshetra until one day, when he locates her in the form of a swan in a lake. At the lake, Urvasi promises to return to him for one night every year.

Swan Lake Symbolism:



The name Odette in Swan Lake means prosperity. Siegfried means victor. Rothbart literally means Red Beard. In Sanskrit, Rakta Bhasa, Rakta means red, and Bhasa means rays. I feel comfortable in associating Rothbart or Red Beard with Red Rays (Rakta Bhasa) of the fiery Sun. Similarly, to me, the name Siegfried seems to be a version of the Sanskrit SvarVid, meaning the finder of light. Odette could be a version of the Sanskrit word Vidyota, meaning illuminating or vidyotita, the enlightened. Symbolically, wealth is represented by light. Wealth, in the context of this story, is true knowledge. Hence, Odette, the wealthy, is Vidyotita, the enlightened.

If Rothbart is the Sun, then Siegfried-SvarVid has to be the moon. The moon is the one who seeks light (Odette). At night, the moon is fancied to take a human form, where he rules the night sky with his brilliant light. But the light that he has is but a reflection (Odile) of sunlight. Realising his mistake, the moon goes in search of his true love and finds her in the form of a swan swimming in a lake. Commonly, throughout the world, swans are used to represent stars. In this context, Odette (the shining light) in the form of a swan is none other than Alderbaran (Alpha Tauri), the Indian Rohini Star. She is the wealth/light sought by the moon as the moon becomes exalted when he meets this star in Taurus. The lake in which she is found is the sunlight. Since the moon sets during the day, metaphorically, the moon (Siegfried-SvarVid) dies with the star Rohini (Odette) in the lake (sunlight).

King Pururavas & Urvasi Symbolism:

Urvasi comes down to earth and stays with King Pururarvas. The legend states that Pururavas was self-effulgent (sva-dṛk, self-enlightened). The Devas created him to kill Dasyus on the battlefield. This symbolically associates Pururavas with the moon and Dasyus with darkness. The moon, the ruler of the night sky, kills darkness with his brilliance. The moon rules winter and gains power in winter. During the winter months, it is imagined that the star Rohini, in the form of Urvasi, descends to be with the moon. The two goats tied to her couch are the twin Ashwins. The Gandharvas are often perceived as the guardians of Vidhya (divine light). At the commencement of summer, they kidnap the twin Ashwins. The Sun becomes exalted when it enters the Ashwini star in the Aries Constellation. When the summer light in the form of the twin Ashwins is stolen, King Pururavas (the moon) loses his royal robe (moonlight). The kidnapping of the twin goats then forces Urvasi to follow them sunward. Having lost Urvasi, Pururavas, the moon searches for his lost love. He wanders across the vast battlefield of Kurukshetra, a metaphor for the celestial sphere and more commonly the Orion Belt. He, as the seeker, must cross the field to locate her - the light. The light of knowledge doesn’t come automatically to a seeker. The person who needs knowledge/light must seek it. He finds her in the form of a swan swimming in a lake. Again, the water of the lake is the sunlight, and the swan symbolically identifies Urvasi with the star Rohini. The moon becomes exalted when it is conjunct with Rohini in the constellation Taurus. Unlike Odette, Urvasi promises to return to Pururavas for one night in a year. Figuratively, she promises to return to the moon every winter or when the moon enters Taurus.

Common Lesson:

Both the Swan Lake and the story of King Pururavas & Urvasi poetically show us that just as at daybreak the queen star Rohini, representing all other stars, enters the solar light and is followed by the self-sacrificing moon of the new moon day, to become one with the Sun, so should we strive to identify ourselves with the Supreme Sun via self-sacrifice (saranagathi). Dying in sunlight, i.e., the moon and the stars losing their glow in the sunlight, is akin to us losing our false ego that we are independent when we perform saranagathi.

The moon in these legends is the mortal soul because the moon waxes and wanes. The waxing and waning of the moon represent cycles of births and deaths. By seeking the divine light (Rohini), the moon learns to identify itself with the Supreme Sun by merging into the solar light (lake) in which it finds the divine Rohini (swan).

The moon needs his love (the light). The moon loses a part of himself when the one he loves the most vanishes from him. For what is the moon without moonlight? To regain his truest form, he has to go in search of his lost love across a vast, deserted field (cosmic plane-Orion Belt). It is the Moon(soul) as the seeker of light (Siegfried-SvarVid-Pururavas), who must wander across the vast celestial field in search of the divine light (Odette-Urvasi).

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