Vamana’s Birth during Bali’s Horse-Sacrifice and the Mapping of Vishnu’s Sacred Presences
एवमश्वे समुत्सृष्टे वितते यज्ञकर्मणि गते च मासत्रितये हूयमाने च पावके
evamaśve samutsṛṣṭe vitate yajñakarmaṇi gate ca māsatritaye hūyamāne ca pāvake
এইদৰে অশ্ব মুক্ত কৰি যজ্ঞকর্ম বিস্তৃতভাৱে চলি থাকিল; তিনিমাহ অতিবাহিত হোৱাত অগ্নিত হবি আহুতি দিয়া হৈছিল।
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
In aśvamedha-style narratives, the horse is allowed to roam for a fixed period while the sacrifice is maintained. The three-month marker functions as a narrative clock indicating the rite’s maturation and the approach of consequential events (challenges, confrontations, or divine intervention).
Pāvaka (‘purifier’) is a common epithet of Agni. It highlights the doctrinal idea that offerings, when properly made, are purified and conveyed through Agni to the intended deities.
Not directly. It is a ritual-progress verse without named tīrthas or rivers; its value is in mapping the sacrificial sequence within the broader Bali/Vāmana narrative frame.