HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 49Shloka 3
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Shloka 3

Kali's Complaint to Brahma (Part 2)Kali’s Complaint to Brahma and the Arrival of Śrī (Jayaśrī) in Bali’s Reign

गत्वा स ददृशे देवं सेन्द्रैर्देवैः समन्वितम् स्वदीप्त्या द्योतयन्तं च स्वदेशं ससुरासुरम्

gatvā sa dadṛśe devaṃ sendrairdevaiḥ samanvitam svadīptyā dyotayantaṃ ca svadeśaṃ sasurāsuram

Having gone there, he beheld the Lord, attended by the gods together with Indra, illuminating by his own radiance his own realm—(a realm) comprising both the suras and the asuras.

Narrator voice (contextual narration) describing Tiṣya’s approach and vision; next verse shifts to Tiṣya addressing Brahmā.
BrahmāIndra
Divine assembly (deva-sabhā)Cosmic order and radiance (tejas)Sura–asura polarity held within a single cosmic domain

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

FAQs

The following verse (49.4) explicitly states that Tiṣya addresses ‘brahmāṇam īśvaram’ (Brahmā, the Lord). Therefore, ‘deva’ in 49.3 is Brahmā, depicted in a court attended by Indra and other devas.

The phrase can be read cosmologically: Brahmā’s jurisdiction encompasses the created order in which both divine and demonic lineages exist. It need not imply social harmony; rather, it signals Brahmā’s overarching creative sovereignty over both factions.

Not here. ‘Svadeśa’ functions as a generic ‘own abode/realm’ (a loka-level reference). Since no named tīrtha or terrestrial feature appears, this verse is primarily narrative-cosmological rather than geographical.