Rāhu, Eclipses, Antarikṣa, and the Seven Subterranean Heavens
Bila-svarga
अथातले मयपुत्रोऽसुरो बलो निवसति येन ह वा इह सृष्टा: षण्णवतिर्माया: काश्चनाद्यापि मायाविनो धारयन्ति यस्य च जृम्भमाणस्य मुखतस्त्रय: स्त्रीगणा उदपद्यन्त स्वैरिण्य: कामिन्य: पुंश्चल्य इति या वै बिलायनं प्रविष्टं पुरुषं रसेन हाटकाख्येन साधयित्वा स्वविलासावलोकनानुरागस्मितसंलापोपगूहनादिभि: स्वैरं किल रमयन्ति यस्मिन्नुपयुक्ते पुरुष ईश्वरोऽहं सिद्धोऽहमित्ययुतमहागजबलमात्मानमभिमन्यमान: कत्थते मदान्ध इव ॥ १६ ॥
athātale maya-putro ’suro balo nivasati yena ha vā iha sṛṣṭāḥ ṣaṇ-ṇavatir māyāḥ kāścanādyāpi māyāvino dhārayanti yasya ca jṛmbhamāṇasya mukhatas trayaḥ strī-gaṇā udapadyanta svairiṇyaḥ kāminyaḥ puṁścalya iti yā vai bilāyanaṁ praviṣṭaṁ puruṣaṁ rasena hāṭakākhyena sādhayitvā sva-vilāsāvalokanānurāga-smita-saṁlāpopagūhanādibhiḥ svairaṁ kila ramayanti yasminn upayukte puruṣa īśvaro ’haṁ siddho ’ham ity ayuta-mahā-gaja-balam ātmānam abhimanyamānaḥ katthate madāndha iva.
My dear King, I shall now describe Atala. There dwells the asura Bala, son of Maya Dānava, who created ninety-six kinds of illusory power—powers that even today some so‑called yogīs and svāmīs exploit to deceive the people. By a mere yawn, Bala brought forth three classes of women: svairiṇī, kāmiṇī, and puṁścalī. The svairiṇīs wed men of their own group, the kāmiṇīs accept men of any group, and the puṁścalīs take husbands one after another. When a man enters Atala, these women at once seize him and make him drink an intoxicant prepared from a drug called hāṭaka; it grants him great sexual prowess. Then, with alluring glances, intimate words, loving smiles, and embraces, they enchant him and draw him into enjoyment until they are fully satisfied. Drunk on his increased potency, he imagines himself as strong as ten thousand elephants and boasts, “I am the Lord; I am perfected,” blinded by false pride and heedless of death drawing near.
Bhagavatam 5.24.16 describes Atala as a subterranean realm ruled by the asura Bala, where powerful māyā (mystic illusion) and sensual enchantment bewilder men into pride and delusion.
He highlights how lust and intoxication operate as māyā—capturing the mind through attraction and leading the conditioned soul to false confidence, thinking “I am lord” and “I am perfected.”
It warns that intoxication, glamour, and ego-boosting pleasures can create a false sense of power; a seeker should cultivate self-control, humility, and devotion to remain clear-minded and spiritually grounded.