तमागतमृषिं दृष्ट्वा सांबो रूपेण गर्वितः । पिंगाक्षं जटिलं रूक्षं विस्वरूपं कृशं तथा
tamāgatamṛṣiṃ dṛṣṭvā sāṃbo rūpeṇa garvitaḥ | piṃgākṣaṃ jaṭilaṃ rūkṣaṃ visvarūpaṃ kṛśaṃ tathā
فلما رأى سامبا ذلك الحكيم قد أقبل، وهو مزهوٌّ بحُسنِ صورته، نظر إليه على أنه أصفرُ العينين، مُلبَّدُ الشعرِ بالجَطا، خشنُ الهيئة، قبيحُ الخِلقة، نحيلٌ كذلك.
Īśvara (Śiva)
Tirtha: Prabhāsa-kṣetra
Type: kshetra
Listener: Śaunaka and other ṛṣis at Naimiṣāraṇya (standard frame, implied)
Scene: At Prabhāsa, the handsome prince Sāmba, adorned and self-assured, looks with disdain at the austere sage Durvāsā—tawny-eyed, matted-haired, rough-bodied, thin and weathered—creating a stark contrast between royal vanity and ascetic tapas.
Pride in outer beauty leads to adharma; Purāṇic ethics emphasize humility and reverence toward ṛṣis regardless of appearance.
The immediate scene is part of the Dvāravatī episode, embedded within Prabhāsakṣetra Māhātmya’s larger sacred-history frame.
None; the verse sets the ethical cause that precipitates the curse narrative.