HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 47Shloka 36
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Vamana Purana — Vishnu Slays Kalanemi, Shloka 36

Vishnu Enters the Deva–Asura War and Slays Kalanemi

तेभ्यः स चाभयं दत्त्वा ज्ञात्वाजेयं च माधवम् विवृद्धिमगमद् ब्रह्मन् यथा व्याधिरुपेक्षितः

tebhyaḥ sa cābhayaṃ dattvā jñātvājeyaṃ ca mādhavam vivṛddhimagamad brahman yathā vyādhirupekṣitaḥ

ครั้นประทานความไร้ภัยแก่พวกนั้น และแม้รู้ว่ามาธวะผู้พิชิตมิได้ โอ้พราหมณ์ เขากลับยิ่งทวีขึ้นดุจโรคที่ถูกละเลย

Narrator (traditional frame in this section: a sage narrator addressing a Brāhmaṇa interlocutor; commonly Pulastya-to-Nārada style in Purāṇic narration)
Vishnu (Mādhava)
Inevitability of Viṣṇu’s supremacy (ajeyatva)Asuric pride and escalationMoral psychology: unchecked fault grows like disease

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

FAQs

The simile signals a Purāṇic moral diagnosis: when arrogance or anger is not restrained by discernment (viveka) and dharma, it does not subside by itself; it proliferates, just as an untreated illness spreads through the body.

The narrative highlights the asuric pattern of tamas and rajas: knowledge (jñāna) can be overridden by passion and pride. Bali’s recognition of Viṣṇu’s invincibility does not immediately translate into surrender; instead it provokes a desperate, escalating reaction.

Granting ‘abhaya’ (assurance of safety) to his own side underscores Bali’s role as a commander-king rallying allies. It also heightens the contrast: even after securing morale, the deeper problem—unchecked hostility toward the divine order—continues to grow.