HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 59Shloka 102
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Vamana Purana — Sarasvata Hymn to Vishnu, Shloka 102

The Sarasvata Hymn to Vishnu (Vishnu-Pañjara) and the Redemption of a Rakshasa

को ऽन्यो बलेर्वञ्चयिता त्वामृते वै भविष्यति को ऽन्यो नाशयति बलाद् दर्पं हैहयभूपतेः

ko 'nyo balervañcayitā tvāmṛte vai bhaviṣyati ko 'nyo nāśayati balād darpaṃ haihayabhūpateḥ

["Rāma’s exemplary avatāra deeds", "Divine agency in world-ordering acts", "Defeat of adharma (Rāvaṇa and retinue)", "Memory of Itihāsa within Purāṇa"]

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A speaker within the narrative (praise addressed to Viṣṇu) to the Lord (direct second-person address).
Vishnu
Vāmana’s stratagem and dharmic ‘deception’Subduing royal pride (darpa-nigraha)Divine uniqueness (ko ’nyo… tvāmṛte)Kingship, power, and humility

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

FAQs

In Purāṇic idiom, vañcana here denotes a divine stratagem used to restore cosmic order (dharma). Bali’s boon-granting and conquest had destabilized the balance of worlds; Vāmana’s ‘cleverness’ is portrayed as a compassionate, lawful means to curb excess without mere annihilation.

The verse alludes to a Haihaya ruler archetype (often associated in wider Purāṇic memory with Kartavīrya Arjuna or Haihaya sovereignty). The point is thematic: only the Supreme can truly humble the pride of mighty royal lineages.

No explicit river, lake, forest, or tīrtha is named in this śloka; it is a pan-avatāra praise embedded in the Bali narrative rather than a geography (tīrtha-māhātmya) passage.