Prahlada’s Defeat by Nara-Narayana and Victory through Bhakti
सप्तर्षिमुख्यो द्विचतुश्च दैत्यो नरस्तु षट् त्रीणि च दैत्यमुख्ये षट्त्रीणि चैकं च दितीश्वरेण मुक्तानि बाणानि नराय विप्र
saptarṣimukhyo dvicatuśca daityo narastu ṣaṭ trīṇi ca daityamukhye ṣaṭtrīṇi caikaṃ ca ditīśvareṇa muktāni bāṇāni narāya vipra
婆羅門よ、七仙のうち最勝の者も矢を放ち、ダイティヤは二矢と四矢を放ち、ナラはダイティヤの首領に六矢と三矢を放った。さらにディティの裔の主は、ナラに向けて六・三・一の矢を放った。
{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
By addressing a ‘vipra’ and invoking ‘saptarṣi-mukhya’, the text frames even violent conflict within a moral-auditory setting: warfare is narrated for discernment (viveka) and instruction, not mere spectacle. The implied lesson is that power must remain accountable to higher wisdom (ṛṣi/śruti-aligned oversight).
Again, this is Carita/Vaṃśānucarita-oriented material—heroic action sequences embedded in the Purāṇic historical-mythic narration, not a direct sarga/pratisarga or manvantara catalogue.
The appearance of ‘saptarṣi-mukhya’ amidst arrow-counting can signal that cosmic order (ṛta/dharma, guarded by sages) remains the silent measure behind worldly contests. The repeated numeric patterns underscore that conflict follows intelligible order, not randomness—suggesting a dharmic ‘grammar’ even in battle.