Portents at Bali’s Sacrifice and the Kośakāra’s Son: The Power of Past Karma
भयो गतश्च नरकं परदारनिषेवणात् मुक्तो वर्षसहस्रान्ते जातो ऽहं श्वेतगर्दभः
bhayo gataśca narakaṃ paradāraniṣevaṇāt mukto varṣasahasrānte jāto 'haṃ śvetagardabhaḥ
పరస్త్రీసంగమం కారణంగా నేను ఘోర నరకానికి వెళ్లాను; వెయ్యేళ్ల అనంతరం విముక్తుడై నేను తెల్ల గాడిదగా జన్మించాను.
{ "primaryRasa": "bibhatsa", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
In dharma literature, violating another’s marriage is treated as a major social and ritual transgression because it destabilizes lineage (gotra/vaṃśa), household order (gṛhastha-dharma), and trust—hence its frequent linkage with naraka and degraded rebirth.
Puranas often quantify punishment to underscore proportional karmic fruition and to make the moral lesson vivid. The number also signals that release is possible after expiation is exhausted, but the residual imprint can still yield an animal rebirth.
The donkey is a common emblem of burden, humiliation, and low social valuation in Sanskrit narrative. The ‘white’ descriptor individualizes the rebirth for recognition within the story and may mark an unusual, memorable form rather than a separate doctrinal category.