Prahlada’s Defeat by Nara-Narayana and Victory through Bhakti
ततो नरो बाणगणैरसख्यैरवास्तरद्भूमिमथो दिशः खम् स चापि दैत्यप्रवरः पृषत्कैश्चिच्छेद वेगात् तपनीयपुङ्खैः
tato naro bāṇagaṇairasakhyairavāstaradbhūmimatho diśaḥ kham sa cāpi daityapravaraḥ pṛṣatkaiściccheda vegāt tapanīyapuṅkhaiḥ
បន្ទាប់មក នរៈ ដោយក្រុមព្រួញរាប់មិនអស់ បានគ្របដណ្តប់លើផែនដី ទិសទាំងឡាយ និងមេឃ។ ហើយដៃត្យដ៏ប្រសើរនោះ ក៏កាត់បំបែកព្រួញទាំងនោះដោយល្បឿន ដោយព្រួញមានស្លាបមាស។
{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "raudra", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The verse illustrates that aggression provokes counter-aggression; violence multiplies and fills one’s whole ‘world’ (earth, sky, directions). The implied ethic is that conflict expands to consume all space of awareness unless checked by higher discernment.
Again, carita/vamśānucarita-style narrative: a descriptive battle scene within the historical-legendary stream of the Purāṇa rather than cosmological categories.
‘Covering earth, directions, and sky’ is a stock totality-image: conflict becomes totalizing. The daitya’s cutting down of arrows with golden-feathered shafts symbolizes technical mastery and the arms-race dynamic—skill answering skill—until a transcendent resolution (often divine) becomes necessary in the broader purāṇic arc.