HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 44Shloka 70
Previous Verse
Next Verse

Vamana Purana — Andhaka's Defeat & Redemption, Shloka 70

Andhaka’s Defeat, the Bhairava Manifestation, and His Redemption as Bhṛṅgī Gaṇapati

वरदो ऽसि यदीशान तद्यातु विलयं मम शारीरं मानसं वाग्जं दुष्कृतं दुर्विचिन्तितम्

varado 'si yadīśāna tadyātu vilayaṃ mama śārīraṃ mānasaṃ vāgjaṃ duṣkṛtaṃ durvicintitam

“Wahai Isana, jika Engkau benar pemberi anugerah, maka biarlah lenyap segala keburukan perbuatanku—yang lahir dari tubuh, pikiran, maupun ucapan—beserta niat jahat yang tersesat.”

Andhaka addressing Īśāna/Śiva
Shiva
Threefold karma (body-speech-mind)Sin and purificationBoon as moral resetTension between confession and latent desire

{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

It reflects the classical triad of karma-channels (kāya-vāk-manas): ethical accountability spans action, speech, and thought. The verse frames Andhaka’s request as comprehensive purification, not merely external absolution.

Within Purāṇic storytelling, such language can be both: a formal confession to qualify for a boon and a narrative device that heightens irony—despite requesting the destruction of ‘durvicintita,’ Andhaka’s later fixation on Ambikā manifests precisely as perverse intention.

No. It is ethical-theological and contains no explicit toponyms or tirtha references.