Gift of Sudarshana — The Gift of Sudarshana: Shiva’s Boon to Vishnu and the Sanctification of Virupaksha
तं माता मुनिशार्दूल शालिपिष्टरसेन वै पोषयामास वदती क्षीरमेतत् सुदुर्गता
taṃ mātā muniśārdūla śālipiṣṭarasena vai poṣayāmāsa vadatī kṣīrametat sudurgatā
the son of the lord of the Daityas lived for three months subsisting on roots
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The verse depicts protective speech born of poverty: she lacks actual milk yet sustains the child with śāli-piṣṭa-rasa and preserves his sense of being cared for. In Purāṇic storytelling, such moments often set up later reversal—divine or karmic providence responding to hardship.
It signals a formal Purāṇic dialogue: the narrator addresses an eminent sage. In the Vāmana Purāṇa this frequently corresponds to a speaker like Pulastya instructing Nārada (or another ṛṣi), especially in geography-and-tīrtha sections where moral exempla are embedded.
Yes. Purāṇas often teach dharma through ordinary life: endurance, care, and truthful intention (even if the words are not literally true) can be portrayed as meritorious, preparing the ground for later divine grace or tīrtha-phala in the surrounding chapter.