Prahlada’s Defeat in Battle and Victory through Bhakti (Nara-Narayana Episode)
राज्यं परित्यज्य महासुरेन्द्रो नियोजयन् सत्पथि दानवेन्द्रान् ध्यायन् स्मरन् केशवमप्रमेयं तस्थौ तदा योगविशुद्धदेहः
rājyaṃ parityajya mahāsurendro niyojayan satpathi dānavendrān dhyāyan smaran keśavamaprameyaṃ tasthau tadā yogaviśuddhadehaḥ
Abandonando o seu reino, o grande senhor dos Asuras, enquanto conduzia os chefes dos Dānavas pelo caminho da retidão, permaneceu então de pé—meditando e recordando o incomensurável Keśava—com o corpo purificado pelo yoga.
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Even a defeated ruler can transform defeat into dharma: Bali relinquishes power, guides his followers toward righteousness, and turns inward to remembrance of the Lord—modeling humility, moral leadership, and bhakti as a stabilizing response to loss.
Primarily Vamśānucarita/Carita (narrative of a royal figure in the Daitya line) with an ethical-dharma emphasis; it is not sarga/pratisarga but character-history illustrating dharma through exemplary conduct.
Bali’s ‘renunciation of rājya’ symbolizes surrender of egoic sovereignty; ‘yoga-purified body’ signifies inner sovereignty replacing outer rule. Remembering Keśava (aprameya) frames liberation as turning from measurable territory (land/kingdom) to the immeasurable Absolute.