Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
कपिचापल्यदोषेण तानि मे यान्तु संक्ष्यम् ततो ऋथध्वजः प्राह शापस्यान्तो भविष्यति
kapicāpalyadoṣeṇa tāni me yāntu saṃkṣyam tato ṛthadhvajaḥ prāha śāpasyānto bhaviṣyati
“कपि-सुलभ चंचलता के दोष से मेरे वे (दुष्परिणाम) नष्ट हो जाएँ।” तब ऋतध्वज ने कहा— “शाप का अंत अवश्य होगा।”
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It is a moral-psychological diagnosis: impulsiveness, instability, and lack of restraint. The narrative uses ‘monkey’ both as a literal transformed state and as a metaphor for the underlying fault that triggered the curse.
Ṛtadhvaja appears here as an authoritative figure—often a righteous king or a tapas-endowed person in Purāṇic idiom—whose pronouncement functions as confirmation that the curse has a defined terminus and will be resolved according to dharma.
Grammatically it points to the set of afflictive results tied to the curse—e.g., the monkey-state and its attendant sufferings or restrictions. The verse compresses the narrative, assuming the listener knows the previously described consequences.