Kali’s Complaint to Brahma and the Arrival of Śrī (Jayaśrī) in Bali’s Reign
गत्वा स ददृशे देवं सेन्द्रैर्देवैः समन्वितम् स्वदीप्त्या द्योतयन्तं च स्वदेशं ससुरासुरम्
gatvā sa dadṛśe devaṃ sendrairdevaiḥ samanvitam svadīptyā dyotayantaṃ ca svadeśaṃ sasurāsuram
అక్కడికి వెళ్లి అతడు ఇంద్రసహిత దేవతలతో కూడిన దేవుని దర్శించాడు; ఆయన తన స్వదీప్తితో సురాసురులతో కూడిన తన లోకాన్ని ప్రకాశింపజేస్తున్నాడు।
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The following verse (49.4) explicitly states that Tiṣya addresses ‘brahmāṇam īśvaram’ (Brahmā, the Lord). Therefore, ‘deva’ in 49.3 is Brahmā, depicted in a court attended by Indra and other devas.
The phrase can be read cosmologically: Brahmā’s jurisdiction encompasses the created order in which both divine and demonic lineages exist. It need not imply social harmony; rather, it signals Brahmā’s overarching creative sovereignty over both factions.
Not here. ‘Svadeśa’ functions as a generic ‘own abode/realm’ (a loka-level reference). Since no named tīrtha or terrestrial feature appears, this verse is primarily narrative-cosmological rather than geographical.