HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 49Shloka 21
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Vamana Purana — Kali's Complaint to Brahma (Part 2), Shloka 21

Kali’s Complaint to Brahma and the Arrival of Śrī (Jayaśrī) in Bali’s Reign

सौवर्णस्यन्दनचरा तामसं गुणमाश्रिता नीलाम्बरा नीमाल्या नीलगन्धामनुलेपना

sauvarṇasyandanacarā tāmasaṃ guṇamāśritā nīlāmbarā nīmālyā nīlagandhāmanulepanā

ती सुवर्ण रथात विचरण करणारी व तमोगुणात स्थित होती; नील वस्त्रे परिधान करणारी, नील माळा धारण करणारी आणि नील सुगंधयुक्त अनुलेपनाने युक्त—अशी ती वर्णिली आहे.

Unspecified narrator voice within Adhyaya 49 (didactic description of guṇa-forms) to the immediate listener in the frame narrative
Guṇa-personified Devī/Śakti (tamas aspect)
Triguṇa doctrineIconography and symbolism (color, vehicle, ornaments)Prakṛti/Śakti as guṇa-bearing power

{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

In Purāṇic and Sāṃkhya-inflected symbolism, tamas signifies heaviness, obscuration, and inertia; dark/blue hues (nīla) naturally convey concealment and depth, making them a conventional visual marker for tamasic predominance.

Not necessarily. The chariot’s gold can function as a poetic or iconographic contrast—splendor in outward form while the inner quality is tamas—or it may indicate that the guṇas, though distinct in function, arise within the same cosmic prakṛti and can be depicted with regal attributes.

The verse reads primarily as a personification of a guṇa (tamas) rather than naming a specific deity. Purāṇas often present abstract metaphysics through deity-like forms to make doctrine memorable and ritually intelligible.