Portents at Bali’s Sacrifice and the Kośakāra’s Son: The Power of Past Karma
ब्राह्मणस्याग्निवेश्यस्य गेहे बहुकलत्रिणः तत्रापि सर्वविज्ञानं प्रत्यभासत् ततो मम
brāhmaṇasyāgniveśyasya gehe bahukalatriṇaḥ tatrāpi sarvavijñānaṃ pratyabhāsat tato mama
{"location": "Sarasvatī-tīrtha (Saroma/Saromahatmya context)", "location_type": "tirtha", "region": "Āryāvarta (northwestern sacred river belt; Sarasvatī tradition)", "sacred_significance": "Tīrtha-māhātmya frame: local episode used to magnify the merit/power of bathing and vows connected with the Sarasvatī-associated sacred spot.", "cosmic_realm": "bhuloka"}
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
It indicates a puranic motif of retained impressions (saṃskāras) ripening into recollection or aptitude in a later birth—sometimes framed as jāti-smara (birth-memory) or spontaneous reawakening of learning.
It can function as a personal name and also as a gotra/pravara-style designation. In narrative usage, it anchors the rebirth in a recognizable Brahmin identity without requiring further geography.
The detail situates the household’s social texture and may foreshadow ethical complications or narrative causality. Puranic stories often include such markers to explain later conflicts, inheritance issues, or moral contrasts.