Adhyaya 26 — Madālasa Names Alarka and Reorients Him Toward Kshatriya Duty
राजोवाच क्रियमाणेऽसकृन्नाम्नि कथ्यतां हास्यकारणम् ।
विक्रान्तश्च सुबाहुश्च तथान्यः शत्रुमर्दनः ॥
rājovāca kriyamāṇe 'sakṛn nāmni kathyatāṃ hāsyakāraṇam / vikrāntaś ca subāhuś ca tathānyaḥ śatrumardanaḥ
Dijo el rey: «Puesto que ríes repetidamente cuando se otorga un nombre, dime la causa de tu risa. (Yo los he llamado) Vikrānta, Subāhu, y al otro, Śatrumardana».
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The king’s pride in heroic names is natural to kṣatriya culture, yet the text sets up a critique: identity built on power-epithets is fragile and may miss the child’s higher welfare.
Upākhyāna used for Dharma teaching; tangentially related to Vaṃśānucarita (royal family narrative), but the focus is ethical/psychological rather than genealogical cataloguing.
Names like Vikrānta/Subāhu/Śatrumardana symbolize outward force; the coming teaching will invert this, presenting inner mastery as the true ‘heroism’.