Portents at Bali’s Sacrifice and the Kośakāra’s Son: The Power of Past Karma
व्रतबन्धे कृते वेदं पपाठासौ दिवाकरः निशाकरो जडतया न पपाठेति नः श्रुतम्
vratabandhe kṛte vedaṃ papāṭhāsau divākaraḥ niśākaro jaḍatayā na papāṭheti naḥ śrutam
வ்ரதபந்தம் முடிந்தபின் திவாகரன் வேதத்தைப் பயின்று ஓதினான்; ஆனால் நிசாகரன் மந்தத்தினால் வேதம் ஓதவில்லை என்று நாம் கேட்டோம்.
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In Purāṇic usage, vratabandha commonly denotes upanayana—the initiation that authorizes a dvija to undertake svādhyāya (Vedic study) and related disciplines.
They function as meaningful proper names (‘Sun’ and ‘Moon’) to heighten contrast: one becomes ‘luminous’ through study, while the other remains ‘darkened’ by jaḍatā (dullness).
Primarily a moral exemplum: after initiation, neglect of study is portrayed as a fault with social and karmic repercussions, setting up the narrative consequences in the following verses.