HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 64Shloka 22
Previous Verse
Next Verse

Vamana Purana — Portents at Bali's Sacrifice, Shloka 22

Portents at Bali’s Sacrifice and the Kośakāra’s Son: The Power of Past Karma

मुद्गलस्य मुनेः पुत्रो ज्ञानविज्ञानपारगः कोशकार इति ख्यात आसीद् ब्रह्मंस्तपोरतः

mudgalasya muneḥ putro jñānavijñānapāragaḥ kośakāra iti khyāta āsīd brahmaṃstaporataḥ

{"recitation_mood": "gentle and laudatory", "suggested_raga": "Khamaj", "pace": "medium", "voice_tone": "warm, respectful, descriptive", "sound_elements": ["soft tanpura", "light ghunghru-like shimmer at epithets", "quiet courtyard ambience"]}

Narrator/teacher voice addressing a Brahmin interlocutor (brahman). (Exact named speakers not present in the given excerpt.)
Genealogical framingAsceticism (tapas)Ideal of jñāna-vijñāna (knowledge and realization)Character introduction

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

FAQs

In Purāṇic idiom, jñāna often denotes doctrinal or essential knowledge, while vijñāna emphasizes realized discernment—knowledge that has become lived insight. Calling him jñāna-vijñāna-pāraga marks him as both learned and spiritually accomplished, setting a high contrast for what follows in the narrative.

Literally ‘maker of a kośa’ (sheath/case/covering). In Purāṇic naming, such epithets can preserve a remembered craft, a symbolic trait (one who ‘fashions coverings’), or a narrative marker. Here it functions primarily as a recognized name while also hinting at themes of ‘sheath’ and ‘inner knowledge’ that Purāṇas sometimes exploit.

No. This line is purely genealogical/character-introductory; the geography-centered material appears elsewhere in the text, but not in the provided śloka.