Kali’s Complaint to Brahma and the Arrival of Śrī (Jayaśrī) in Bali’s Reign
स्वधर्मस्थायिनो वर्णा ह्याश्रमांश्चाविश्न् द्विजाः प्रजापालनधर्मस्थाः सदैव मनुजर्षभाः
svadharmasthāyino varṇā hyāśramāṃścāviśn dvijāḥ prajāpālanadharmasthāḥ sadaiva manujarṣabhāḥ
वर्ण अपने-अपने स्वधर्म में स्थित रहे और द्विज अपने आश्रमों में प्रविष्ट होकर वहीं टिके रहे। प्रजा-पालन के धर्म में सदा स्थित वे नरश्रेष्ठ (राजा आदि) ऐसे ही प्रतिष्ठित रहे।
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In the Vāmana–Bali frame it functions as praise of the prevailing order under Bali’s reign, while simultaneously presenting a Purāṇic template of ideal governance: social roles steady, āśrama disciplines maintained, and rulers committed to prajā-pālana.
It indicates that the twice-born properly undertake and remain within their life-stage disciplines—study, householdership, forest-dwelling, renunciation—rather than deviating from prescribed conduct.
Purāṇic political theology treats protection of subjects as the core royal duty; when it is upheld, prosperity and moral order are said to radiate outward into the world.