Bali Learns of Vamana in Aditi’s Womb and Prahlada Teaches Refuge in Hari
एवं विदित्वा दैत्येन्द्र न विषादं कथञ्चन कर्तुमर्हसि विद्वांस्त्वं पण्डितो नावसीदति
evaṃ viditvā daityendra na viṣādaṃ kathañcana kartumarhasi vidvāṃstvaṃ paṇḍito nāvasīdati
Dengan mengetahui demikian, wahai raja para Daitya, engkau tidak patut bersedih dengan cara apa pun; sebab engkau berilmu—orang bijaksana tidak tenggelam dalam keputusasaan.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
“Daityendra” denotes the Daitya-king, typically Bali, central to the Vāmana/Trivikrama episode.
A ruler should not govern from despair or emotional collapse; learning (vidyā) and wisdom (paṇḍitva) are shown by steadiness and right action even when circumstances turn adverse.
Purāṇas frequently embed nīti within narratives: the mythic reversal becomes a vehicle to teach inner discipline (self-mastery) as a core of dharma.