Deva–Asura Battle after the Nectar; Bali’s Illusions and Hari’s Intervention
वृषाकपिस्तु जम्भेन महिषेण विभावसु: । इल्वल: सह वातापिर्ब्रह्मपुत्रैररिन्दम ॥ ३२ ॥ कामदेवेन दुर्मर्ष उत्कलो मातृभि: सह । बृहस्पतिश्चोशनसा नरकेण शनैश्चर: ॥ ३३ ॥ मरुतो निवातकवचै: कालेयैर्वसवोऽमरा: । विश्वेदेवास्तु पौलोमै रुद्रा: क्रोधवशै: सह ॥ ३४ ॥
vṛṣākapis tu jambhena mahiṣeṇa vibhāvasuḥ ilvalaḥ saha vātāpir brahma-putrair arindama
Ô Mahārāja Parīkṣit, dompteur d’ennemis ! Vṛṣākapi (Śiva) combattit Jambha, et Vibhāvasu (Agni) combattit Mahiṣāsura. Ilvala, avec son frère Vātāpi, affronta les fils de Brahmā. Durmarṣa combattit Kāmadeva; le démon Utkala combattit les déesses Mātṛkā; Bṛhaspati combattit Uśanas (Śukrācārya); et Śanaiścara (Saturne) combattit Narakāsura. Les Maruts combattirent Nivātakavaca; les Vasus, les démons Kālakeya; les Viśvedeva, les Pauloma; et les Rudras, les Krodhavaśa, asservis par la colère.
The verse lists matchups: Vṛṣākapi fought Jambha, Vibhāvasu fought Mahiṣa, and Ilvala with Vātāpi fought the sons of Brahmā.
He is mapping the battlefield for Parīkṣit—showing how the cosmic conflict unfolds through specific pairings of devas and asuras.
They remind a seeker that life involves struggle between dharma and adharma, and one should consciously side with dharma through discipline, prayer, and devotion.