Āśā-prabhava (आशाप्रभव) — On the Rise and Power of Hope/Expectation
Sumitra Itihāsa Begins
तामपृच्छत् स दैत्येन्द्र: सा श्रीरित्येनमब्रवीत् । उषितास्मि स्वयं वीर त्वयि सत्यपराक्रम
tām apṛcchat sa daityendraḥ sā śrīr ity enam abravīt | uṣitāsmi svayaṃ vīra tvayi satyaparākrama, tvayā tyaktā gamiṣyāmi bala-hānugatā hāham ||
سأل سيدُ الدَّيْتْيَةِ الإلهةَ المتلألئة التي ظهرت. فأجابت: «أنا شْرِي (لاكشمي). أيها البطل ذو البأس الصادق، لقد سكنتُ فيك من تلقاء نفسي؛ ولكنك الآن قد هجرتني، ولذلك سأرحل. فأنا أتبع بالا (القوة/الشدّة)، فإذا انحطّت القوة انكفأتُ أنا أيضاً».
ब्राह्मण उवाच
Śrī (fortune, splendor, legitimacy of rule) is not permanently fixed; she abides where strength and right conduct are sustained, and she departs when one abandons the conditions that uphold power—especially truthfulness and disciplined governance. The verse frames prosperity as ethically contingent rather than merely accidental.
From Prahlāda’s body a luminous देवी appears. The Daitya king asks her identity; she declares herself to be Śrī (Lakṣmī). She explains that she had been dwelling in him voluntarily, but since he has ‘abandoned’ her, she will leave—because she follows Bala, and with the waning of strength she too moves away.