HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 51Shloka 8
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Vamana Purana — Bali Learns of Vamana, Shloka 8

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

None explicit in this verse (note: “vāmana” here is descriptive, not the avatāra)

Narrator (Purāṇic voice) describing the Daṇava-lord’s vision (likely Bali)
Vishnu (Madhusudana)Lokapalas (directional guardians)Devamātṛ / Devajananī (Mother of the gods)
Vision of divine realmsSacred landscape populated by gods and guardiansApproach to Devamātṛ as a liminal sacred spaceSearch for Vishnu (Madhusudana)

{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

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.