Adhyaya 18 — Arjuna Declines the Throne; Garga Directs Him to Dattatreya; The Gods Defeat the Daityas through Dattatreya’s Vision and the Movement of Lakshmi
दत्तात्रेयस्ततो देवान् विहस्येदमथाब्रवीत् ।
दिष्ट्या वर्धथ दैत्यानामेषा लक्ष्मीः शिरोगता ।
सप्त स्थानान्यतिक्रान्ता नवमं यमुपैष्यति ॥
dattātreyas tato devān vihasyedam athābravīt | diṣṭyā vardhatha daityānām eṣā lakṣmīḥ śirogatā | sapta sthānāny atikrāntā navamaṃ yam upaiṣyati ||
அப்போது தத்தாத்ரேயர் சிரித்தபடி தேவர்களிடம் கூறினார்—‘தைத்தியர்களின் செல்வம் நிச்சயமாக வளரட்டும்; இந்த “லக்ஷ்மி” அவர்களின் தலைமேல் வந்து விழுந்தாள்! ஏழு நிலையங்களைத் தாண்டி, அவள் ஒன்பதாம் நிலையிற்குச் செல்வாள்।’
Dattātreya’s laughter signals the inevitability of consequence: what the Daityas call ‘fortune’ is actually the setup for their fall. Adharma often mistakes immediate gain for lasting prosperity.
A narrative hinge that foreshadows outcomes (vaṃśānucarita-style moral episode), not a direct pancalakṣaṇa passage.
‘Lakṣmī on the head’ is double-edged: externally, they bear the palanquin; internally, they have enthroned craving above discernment. The cryptic ‘seven stations… ninth’ functions as omen-language: a destined transition from apparent elevation to a terminal locus (often read in Purāṇic idiom as the movement toward ruin/niyati).