Prahlada’s Pilgrimage and the Origin of the Sudarshana–Trishula Exchange (Jalodbhava Episode)
सर्वाणि भद्राण्याप्नोति शरीरारोग्यमुत्तमम् अनन्तां मनसः प्रीतिं रूपं चातीव शोभनम्
sarvāṇi bhadrāṇyāpnoti śarīrārogyamuttamam anantāṃ manasaḥ prītiṃ rūpaṃ cātīva śobhanam
وہ ہر طرح کی بھلائی پاتا ہے—جسم کی اعلیٰ تندرستی، دل کی بے پایاں خوشی، اور نہایت ہی حسین و شاندار صورت۔
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "shringara", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Within Adhyāya 54 the results are tied to proper worship/observance connected with Janārdana in the Nakṣatra framework (often called Nakṣatrapuruṣa), typically involving fasting, pūjā, and orderly observance according to prescribed lunar mansions.
Purāṇic phalaśrutis often present a triad: bodily well-being (ārogya), mental well-being (prīti/śānti), and social/visible radiance (rūpa/tejas). Together they signify holistic auspiciousness rather than a single material reward.
Not in this śloka. In the Vāmana Purāṇa, such phala verses frequently appear inside a larger tīrtha-mahātmya or vrata instruction, but the geography is supplied by surrounding verses, not here.