HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 49Shloka 11
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Vamana Purana — Kali's Complaint to Brahma (Part 2), Shloka 11

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

तपो ऽहिंसा च सत्यं च शौचमिन्द्रियनिग्रहः दया दानं त्वानृशंस्यं शुश्रुषा यज्ञकर्म च

tapo 'hiṃsā ca satyaṃ ca śaucamindriyanigrahaḥ dayā dānaṃ tvānṛśaṃsyaṃ śuśruṣā yajñakarma ca

தபம், அஹிம்சை, சத்தியம், தூய்மை, இந்திரியக் கட்டுப்பாடு; கருணை, தானம், அந்ருஷம்ச்யம் (அக்கிரூரம்), சுஷ்ரூஷை (குருசேவை) மற்றும் யஜ்ஞக் கர்மம்—இவையே தர்மத்தின் அங்கங்களாக நிலவின.

Narrator continuing the instruction to Nārada
Agni (implicit in yajña-karma)
Ethical foundations of Kṛta-yugaInner discipline and social virtueRitual and morality as complementaryDharma as a composite of virtues

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FAQs

Both: the verse lists the operative constituents of Dharma when it is ‘four-footed’—i.e., when the moral-ritual ecosystem is intact. In Purāṇic framing, Kṛta-yuga is recognized by the widespread presence of these virtues in society.

Purāṇic Dharma often treats yajña as a regulated sacred act embedded in cosmic reciprocity, while ahiṃsā is a broad ethical ideal. Different traditions reconcile them by emphasizing intention, scriptural regulation, substitutionary offerings, or the progressive interiorization of sacrifice; the verse simply presents both as harmonized pillars of restored order.

Śuśruṣā denotes disciplined, respectful service—listening and attending to teachers, elders, guests, and dependents. It is a social virtue that stabilizes transmission of knowledge and ethical culture, complementing personal disciplines like tapaḥ and indriya-nigraha.