HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 56Shloka 6
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Shloka 6

Gift of SudarshanaThe Gift of Sudarshana: Shiva’s Boon to Vishnu and the Sanctification of Virupaksha

तं माता मुनिशार्दूल शालिपिष्टरसेन वै पोषयामास वदती क्षीरमेतत् सुदुर्गता

taṃ mātā muniśārdūla śālipiṣṭarasena vai poṣayāmāsa vadatī kṣīrametat sudurgatā

[{"question": "Why is the detail of ‘three months on roots, fruits, and water’ emphasized?", "answer": "In Purāṇic narrative, a regulated, minimal diet marks tapas as disciplined rather than merely self-torturing. It signals inner restraint (saṃyama) and ritual fitness, often preceding a major encounter with divinity or a decisive turn in the story."}, {"question": "What is the narrative function of giving gold to Brahmins before entering Daṇḍaka?", "answer": "Dāna to qualified Brahmins is presented as a dharmic act that ‘stabilizes’ the merit of austerity. It also frames the protagonist’s movement into the forest not as lawless wandering but as a sanctioned, merit-bearing transition."}, {"question": "What is Daṇḍaka in Purāṇic geography?", "answer": "Daṇḍaka is a well-known forest-region of Itihāsa-Purāṇa memory, associated with formidable wilderness and ascetic life. Mentioning it evokes a liminal sacred landscape—remote, dangerous, and suited to tapas and transformative encounters."}]

Narrator (likely Pulastya) addressing a sage-listener (honorific: muniśārdūla; commonly Nārada in Vāmana Purāṇa frames)
Poverty and maternal careCompassionate deception (protective speech)Food symbolism (milk vs. rice-extract)Human vulnerability within tirtha-narrative framing

{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

The verse depicts protective speech born of poverty: she lacks actual milk yet sustains the child with śāli-piṣṭa-rasa and preserves his sense of being cared for. In Purāṇic storytelling, such moments often set up later reversal—divine or karmic providence responding to hardship.

It signals a formal Purāṇic dialogue: the narrator addresses an eminent sage. In the Vāmana Purāṇa this frequently corresponds to a speaker like Pulastya instructing Nārada (or another ṛṣi), especially in geography-and-tīrtha sections where moral exempla are embedded.

Yes. Purāṇas often teach dharma through ordinary life: endurance, care, and truthful intention (even if the words are not literally true) can be portrayed as meritorious, preparing the ground for later divine grace or tīrtha-phala in the surrounding chapter.