# Cc. Antya 14.16
## Text
> etasya mohanākhyasya
> gatiṁ kāmapy upeyuṣaḥ
> bhramābhā kāpi vaicitrī
> divyonmāda itīryate
> udghūrṇā-citra-jalpādyās
> tad-bhedā bahavo matāḥ
## Synonyms
*etasya*—of this; *mohana*-*ākhyasya*—mood known as *mohana,* or enchanting; *gatim*—progress; *kāmapi*—inexplicable; *upeyuṣaḥ*—having obtained; *bhrama*-*ābhā*—resembling bewilderment; *kāpi*—some; *vaicitrī*—condition bringing about astonishment; *divya*-*unmāda*—transcendental madness; *iti*—thus; *īryate*—it is called; *udghūrṇā*—of the name *udghūrṇā*; *citra*-*jalpa*—of the name *citra-jalpa*; *ādyāḥ*—and so on; *tat*-*bhedāḥ*—different features of that; *bahavaḥ*—many; *matāḥ*—described.
## Translation
**"When the ecstatic emotion of enchantment gradually progresses, it becomes similar to bewilderment. Then one reaches the stage of astonishment [vaicitrī], which awakens transcendental madness. Udghūrṇā and citra-jalpa are two among the many divisions of transcendental madness."**
## Purport
This is a quotation from the *Ujjvala-nīlamaṇi* (*Sthāyibhāva-prakaraṇa* 190).