HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 48Shloka 10
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Vamana Purana — Kali's Complaint to Brahma (Part 1), Shloka 10

Kali’s Complaint to Brahma and the Arrival of Śrī (Jayaśrī) in Bali’s Court

तान् प्रभग्नान् सुरगाणान् बलिबाणापुरोगमाः पृष्ठतश्चाद्रवन् सर्वे त्रैलोक्यविजिगीषवः

tān prabhagnān suragāṇān balibāṇāpurogamāḥ pṛṣṭhataścādravan sarve trailokyavijigīṣavaḥ

{"has_teaching": true, "teaching_type": "bhakti", "core_concept": "śaraṇāgati to Puruṣottama as the direct means to śreyas", "teaching_summary": "Take refuge in Mādhava, the Supreme Person bearing śaṅkha–cakra–gadā; surrender is presented as efficacious and welfare-bestowing.", "vedantic_theme": "Puruṣottama supremacy; grace (anugraha) as the decisive factor; bhakti as upāya.Vamana Purana,48,11,VamP 48.11,saṃbādhyamānā daiteyairdavāḥ sendrā bhayāturāḥ triviṣṭapaṃ parityajya brahmalokamupāgatāḥ,संबाध्यमाना दैतेयैर्दवाः सेन्द्रा भयातुराः त्रिविष्टपं परित्यज्य ब्रह्मलोकमुपागताः,Vamana–Bali Narrative,Cosmology / Flight to Higher Worlds,Adhyaya 48 (Devas abandon Svarga and seek refuge in Brahmaloka),11,saṃbādhyamānā daiteyairdavāḥ sendrā bhayāturāḥ triviṣṭapaṃ parityajya brahmalokamupāgatāḥ,saṃbādhyamānā daiteyair devāḥ sendrā bhayāturāḥ triviṣṭapaṃ parityajya brahma-lokam upāgatāḥ,Pressed hard by the Daityas

Narratorial voice (Purāṇic narrator).
Indra (Śakra)
Imperial ambition (trailokya-vijaya)Pursuit after routBali’s ascendancy as a cosmic threat

{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

It marks Bali’s campaign as more than a local victory: it is a bid for universal sovereignty over the three cosmic tiers. This is precisely the condition that triggers Viṣṇu’s corrective avatāra strategy (Vāmana/Trivikrama).

Purāṇic battle narration often highlights emblematic champions to represent the whole Daitya coalition. Bali signifies legitimate Daitya kingship and ritual power; Bāṇa represents formidable martial support—together signaling a consolidated, aggressive front.

It depicts a tactical collapse, not absolute annihilation. The Devas’ retreat is a narrative hinge: their loss of position leads to seeking higher refuge and the eventual restoration through divine intervention.