Prahlada’s Defeat by Nara-Narayana and Victory through Bhakti
इत्युक्ताः कम्पमानास्ते जग्मुर्गृह्योर्वशीं दिवम् सहस्राक्षाय तां प्रादाद् रूपयौवनशालिनीम्
ityuktāḥ kampamānāste jagmurgṛhyorvaśīṃ divam sahasrākṣāya tāṃ prādād rūpayauvanaśālinīm
یوں کہے جانے پر وہ دونوں کانپتے ہوئے دیولोक گئے، اُروَشی کو لے آئے؛ اور حسن و شباب سے آراستہ اس دوشیزہ کو سہسرآکش (اِندر) کے حضور پیش کر دیا۔
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The verse highlights how fear/awe operates even among exalted beings and how celestial power structures mobilize resources (here, an apsaras) to address situations. It implicitly warns that beauty and desire can become instruments within political or cosmic maneuvering.
Primarily within Vamśānucarita/Caritāni-type narrative material (accounts of notable events and actors), rather than sarga/pratisarga. It is episodic storytelling about divine actors and their actions.
Urvaśī often symbolizes enchantment (mohana) and the potency of kāma in disrupting or redirecting aims. Presenting her to Indra can signify the instrumentalization of desire/beauty within dharmic or adharmic strategies, depending on the surrounding episode.