Portents at Bali’s Sacrifice and the Kośakāra’s Son: The Power of Past Karma
एतस्मिन्नन्तरे प्राप्ता सूर्पाक्षी विप्रबालकम् अन्तर्धानगता भूमौ चिक्षेप गृहदूरतः
etasminnantare prāptā sūrpākṣī viprabālakam antardhānagatā bhūmau cikṣepa gṛhadūrataḥ
“Meanwhile, Sūrpākṣī arrived; having made herself invisible, she cast the young brāhmaṇa boy onto the ground, far from the house.”
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She functions as a rākṣasī-type antagonist employing stealth (antardhāna) and violence against a vulnerable dhārmic figure (a brāhmaṇa child). Such figures often embody adharma’s covert, disruptive force.
Brāhmaṇas symbolize Vedic order, ritual continuity, and social dharma. Targeting a brāhmaṇa child heightens the moral gravity: it is an attack on innocence and on the carriers of sacred knowledge.
The ‘house’ represents protected social space (gṛhastha order). Casting the child away from it signals rupture of safety and community oversight, a common Purāṇic marker of adharma intruding into domestic life.