The Sarasvata Hymn to Vishnu (Vishnu-Pañjara) and the Redemption of a Rakshasa
को ऽन्यो बलेर्वञ्चयिता त्वामृते वै भविष्यति को ऽन्यो नाशयति बलाद् दर्पं हैहयभूपतेः
ko 'nyo balervañcayitā tvāmṛte vai bhaviṣyati ko 'nyo nāśayati balād darpaṃ haihayabhūpateḥ
together with his ministers and his vanguard?”"
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In Purāṇic idiom, vañcana here denotes a divine stratagem used to restore cosmic order (dharma). Bali’s boon-granting and conquest had destabilized the balance of worlds; Vāmana’s ‘cleverness’ is portrayed as a compassionate, lawful means to curb excess without mere annihilation.
The verse alludes to a Haihaya ruler archetype (often associated in wider Purāṇic memory with Kartavīrya Arjuna or Haihaya sovereignty). The point is thematic: only the Supreme can truly humble the pride of mighty royal lineages.
No explicit river, lake, forest, or tīrtha is named in this śloka; it is a pan-avatāra praise embedded in the Bali narrative rather than a geography (tīrtha-māhātmya) passage.