Bali Learns of Vamana in Aditi’s Womb and Prahlada Teaches Refuge in Hari
तस्योपरि महापुर्यस्त्वष्टौ लोकपतीस्तथा तेषामातुः स ददृशे मृगपक्षिगणैर्वृतम्
tasyopari mahāpuryastvaṣṭau lokapatīstathā teṣāmātuḥ sa dadṛśe mṛgapakṣigaṇairvṛtam
Above that (region), he beheld great settlements and also the eight Lokapālas. There too he saw their Mother, surrounded by groups of deer and birds.
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
They are the directional guardians commonly enumerated as Indra (East), Agni (Southeast), Yama (South), Nirṛti (Southwest), Varuṇa (West), Vāyu (Northwest), Kubera (North), and Īśāna (Northeast). The verse signals a cosmically ordered sacred region.
The text points to Devamātṛ/Devajananī, a divine mother-figure associated with the gods’ origin and protection. In Purāṇic geography, her āśrama or presence marks a highly meritorious (puṇya) zone where even animals appear as peaceful attendants.
Such imagery is a standard Purāṇic marker of āśrama-sattva: a sanctified environment where natural hostility subsides, indicating tapas, purity, and the presence of dharma in the landscape.