Ritadhvaja’s Aid to Galava and Andhaka’s Infatuation with Gauri
पुलस्त्य उवाच आसीन्नृपो रघुकुले रिपुजिन्महर्षे तस्यात्मजो गुमगणैकनिर्धिर्महात्मा सूरो ऽसैन्यदमनो बलवान् सुहृत्सु विप्रान्धदीनकृपणेषु समानभावः // वम्प्_33.2 ऋतध्वजो नाम महान् महीयान् स गालवार्थे तुरगाधिपूढः पातालकेतुं निजघान पृष्ठे बाणेन चन्द्रार्धनिभेन वेगात्
pulastya uvāca āsīnnṛpo raghukule ripujinmaharṣe tasyātmajo gumagaṇaikanirdhirmahātmā sūro 'sainyadamano balavān suhṛtsu viprāndhadīnakṛpaṇeṣu samānabhāvaḥ // VamP_33.2 ṛtadhvajo nāma mahān mahīyān sa gālavārthe turagādhipūḍhaḥ pātālaketuṃ nijaghāna pṛṣṭhe bāṇena candrārdhanibhena vegāt
プラスタヤは言った。「大いなる仙よ、ラグ族には敵を征する王がいた。その子は大心の人で、数知れぬ徳の海であった—勇猛にして、軍勢なくとも敵を鎮め得、強健で、友にもバラモンにも、また盲者・貧者・困窮者にも等しい心を向けた。 その卓越し輝かしい者の名はリタドヴァジャ(Ṛtadhvaja)である。ガーラヴァに関わる用のため、彼は名馬に乗り、半月に似た迅速な矢をもって背後よりパーターラケートゥ(Pātālaketu)を討ち倒した。」
{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The epithet signals a heroic-ethical ideal: the king’s personal valor and strategic capacity are so great that he can neutralize threats without relying on mass violence. In Purāṇic style, it also elevates him as a dhārmic protector suited to assist sages like Gālava.
Ṛta denotes cosmic order/truth (a Vedic concept). ‘Ṛtadhvaja’ (‘banner of ṛta’) frames the king as one whose sovereignty is aligned with truth and right order—an important Purāṇic marker of legitimate rule.
Here it is a proper name of a daitya/hostile figure. The element ‘Pātāla’ evokes the netherworld, but the verse narrates a combat event rather than a pilgrimage geography; no tīrtha is identified in this line.