HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 65Shloka 28
Previous Verse

Shloka 28

Vamana's Three StepsVamana’s Three Steps and the Binding of Bali

शिखायां देवदेवस्य ध्रुवो राजा न्यषीदत तारका रोमकूपेभ्यो रोमाणि च महर्षयः

śikhāyāṃ devadevasya dhruvo rājā nyaṣīdata tārakā romakūpebhyo romāṇi ca maharṣayaḥ

{"location": "Saro-tirtha (implied by Saromahatmya section)", "location_type": "tirtha", "region": "Unspecified (local mahatmya setting)", "sacred_significance": "A local sacred narrative (itihasa) situated at/around Saro, framing miraculous or fated events as part of the tirtha’s power.", "cosmic_realm": "bhuloka"}

Not specified in the given excerpt (narrative voice within the Purāṇic account).
Vishnu (Trivikrama)Dhruva (as a celestial station)
Cosmic body (virāṭ) mappingAstral cosmographyDhruva as axis mundi (cosmic pivot)Rṣi-constellations and sacralization of the sky

{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

Dhruva is the ‘fixed’ point around which the heavens appear to revolve. Placing him on the summit of the cosmic person symbolizes the axis of stability (dhruvatva) at the highest point, making the deity’s body the very frame of the cosmos.

The verse uses a microcosm–macrocosm analogy: innumerable pores suggest innumerable stars, while hairs—fine, radiant filaments—become the ṛṣis who ‘illuminate’ and regulate cosmic order through tapas and knowledge. It sacralizes the night sky as an emanation of the divine body.

Purāṇic cosmology often speaks in layered registers. The imagery can be read as (1) a mythic account of manifestation, and (2) a symbolic teaching that all celestial order is grounded in the supreme being’s presence (adhisthāna).