Prahlada’s Defeat by Nara-Narayana and Victory through Bhakti
ब्रह्मस्त्रे तु प्रशमिते प्रह्लादः क्रोधमूर्छितः गदां प्रगृह्य तरसा प्रचस्कन्द रथोत्तमात्
brahmastre tu praśamite prahlādaḥ krodhamūrchitaḥ gadāṃ pragṛhya tarasā pracaskanda rathottamāt
当梵天神矢(Brahmāstra)被平息之后,普罗诃罗陀为怒所昏,执起钉锤,猛然自其上等战车跃下。
{ "primaryRasa": "raudra", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Even a revered devotee-figure like Prahlāda can be portrayed as momentarily seized by krodha; the Purāṇic lesson is that anger clouds discernment and escalates conflict from regulated missile-war to blunt-force confrontation.
Vamśānucarita/Carita (deeds of notable beings). The verse also functions as upadeśa by illustrating an inner vice (krodha) surfacing in outer action.
The pacification of Brahmāstra marks the exhaustion of ‘cosmic’ instruments; Prahlāda’s descent with a gadā symbolizes the descent from subtle, mantra-governed power to embodied, passion-driven struggle—an allegory for how unresolved ego/anger persists after external threats are neutralized.