Prahlada’s Defeat by Nara-Narayana and Victory through Bhakti
तस्यादूरे महाशाखं शलवृक्षं शरैश्चितम् ददर्श बाणानपरान् मुखे लग्नान् परस्परम्
tasyādūre mahāśākhaṃ śalavṛkṣaṃ śaraiścitam dadarśa bāṇānaparān mukhe lagnān parasparam
离他不远处,他看见一株枝干宏大的娑罗树,密布箭矢;又见别的箭矢,其锋镞彼此嵌入相扣。
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The verse emphasizes the escalation of conflict and the visibility of consequences: violence leaves unmistakable marks in the world, serving as a cautionary backdrop to the later dharmic resolution typical of Purāṇic narratives.
Primarily Vamśānucarita/Carita-style narrative movement (episode narration within a dynastic/daitya-deva account), rather than cosmogenesis (sarga/pratisarga).
Arrows embedded ‘mutually’ can symbolize rivalry and entanglement—hostilities that bind opponents together in a cycle—setting the stage for a higher intervention or counsel that redirects raw power toward dharma.