HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 65Shloka 61
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Shloka 61

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

तत्रोत्सवो सुख्यतमो भविष्यति दिवानिशं हृष्टजनाभिरामम् यथैव राज्ये भवतस्तु साम्प्रतं तथैव सा भाव्यथ कौमुदी च // वम्प्_65.60 इत्येवमुक्त्वा मधुहा दितीश्वरं विसर्जयित्वा सुतलं सभार्यम् यज्ञं समादाय जगाम तूर्णं स शक्रसद्भामरसंघजुष्टम्

tatrotsavo sukhyatamo bhaviṣyati divāniśaṃ hṛṣṭajanābhirāmam yathaiva rājye bhavatastu sāmprataṃ tathaiva sā bhāvyatha kaumudī ca // VamP_65.60 ityevamuktvā madhuhā ditīśvaraṃ visarjayitvā sutalaṃ sabhāryam yajñaṃ samādāya jagāma tūrṇaṃ sa śakrasadbhāmarasaṃghajuṣṭam

{"primary_rasa": "shanta", "secondary_rasa": "adbhuta", "intensity": 8, "emotional_arc": "Moves from devotional instruction to a revelatory identification: brāhmaṇas as Hari’s own body, producing wonder and reverence.", "mood_keywords": ["devotion", "reverence", "sacrality", "wonder", "obedience to scripture", "humility"]}

:
Narrative voice recounting Viṣṇu’s words and actions; Viṣṇu (Madhuhā) addressing Bali (Ditīśvara) is implied in the quoted promise about Kaumudī
ViṣṇuIndra (Śakra)Bali
Kaumudī/seasonal festival sanctityPublic joy as dharmic fruitViṣṇu as guarantor of order for Devas and AsurasRitual (yajña) as cosmic mechanismReconciliation/settlement with Bali

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

FAQs

‘Kaumudī’ literally relates to moonlight (kumuda/kaumudī) and commonly denotes an autumnal, moonlit festive observance. Here it functions as a named celebration characterized by continuous day-night rejoicing, indicating a ritually sanctioned, recurring festival in Bali’s realm (and/or as a boon promised by the Lord).

The Vāmana–Bali narrative emphasizes dharma rather than annihilation: Bali’s truthfulness and gift (dāna) are honored, and his sovereignty is relocated to Sutala. This preserves cosmic balance—Devas regain their stations while Bali receives an enduring, protected domain.

It marks a narrative transition from the Asura settlement back to the Deva order: Viṣṇu, as the ritual and cosmic sovereign, proceeds to Indra’s court to re-establish the gods as rightful recipients of sacrificial shares and governance.