Vamana's Three Steps — Binding of Bali
वामन उवाच गजाश्वभूहिरण्यादि तदर्थिभ्यः प्रदीयताम् एतावता त्वहं चार्थी देहि राजन् पदत्रयम्
vāmana uvāca gajāśvabhūhiraṇyādi tadarthibhyaḥ pradīyatām etāvatā tvahaṃ cārthī dehi rājan padatrayam
Vāmana said: “Let elephants, horses, land, gold and the like be given to those who desire them. As for me, I seek only this much—O king, grant me three paces (of land).”
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The verse frames Vāmana as an ideal brāhmaṇa petitioner who asks for a minimal, precise grant. Narratively, it heightens the contrast between Bali’s vast generosity and the seemingly small request that will nevertheless restore cosmic balance.
A small, clearly delimited request tests the donor’s truthfulness (satya) and commitment to dāna. In the wider Vāmana–Bali cycle, the ‘three paces’ become the legal/ritual basis for Viṣṇu’s cosmic stride (Trivikrama) without Bali being coerced—Bali consents through a formal gift.
No specific tīrtha, river, forest, or region is named here; the verse is focused on the ethics and form of the requested donation.