Prahlada’s Defeat by Nara-Narayana and Victory through Bhakti
ततः स विस्मितान् सर्वान् कन्दर्पादीन् महामुने दृष्ट्वा प्रोवाच वचनं स्मितं कृत्वा शुभव्रतः
tataḥ sa vismitān sarvān kandarpādīn mahāmune dṛṣṭvā provāca vacanaṃ smitaṃ kṛtvā śubhavrataḥ
Kemudian, wahai mahāmuni, melihat mereka semua—Kandarpa dan yang lain—tercengang, sang pemelihara vrata yang suci itu tersenyum dahulu lalu mengucapkan sepatah kata kepada mereka.
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Authority need not be harsh: the smile before speech suggests compassion and measured correction. Ethical instruction is most potent when delivered without anger, grounded in śubha-vrata (disciplined virtue).
Again, this is narrative-carita material (Vamśānucarita/ākhyāna). It supports dharma-teaching through exemplary conduct rather than cosmological description.
Kandarpa represents desire’s coercive force; the gods’ astonishment signals that desire is not ultimate. The divine smile implies desire can be reoriented or pacified by higher consciousness rather than suppressed by violence.