Kali’s Complaint to Brahma and the Arrival of Śrī (Jayaśrī) in Bali’s Reign
इत्येवं कथितस्तुभ्यं तेषां दानव निर्णयः
ityevaṃ kathitastubhyaṃ teṣāṃ dānava nirṇayaḥ
Demikianlah, wahai Dānava, penetapan/penilaian tentang mereka telah dijelaskan kepadamu.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Both senses are available: ‘nirṇaya’ can mean a settled judgment, and in Purāṇic didactic passages it often functions as a taxonomy—an authoritative ‘this is how they are to be understood’ classification of a group’s traits.
It is a vocative of identity and status: Bali is the paradigmatic Dānava ruler in the Vāmana cycle. Addressing him as ‘dānava’ reinforces the narrative frame and the audience of the instruction.
Primarily structural: it signals the end of a descriptive unit and prepares for the next narrative move (often a new speaker, vow, or episode).