Ritadhvaja’s Aid to Galava and Andhaka’s Infatuation with Gauri
न पिरज्ञातवांस्तत्र का तु सा गिरिकन्यका नात्राश्चर्यं न पश्यन्ति चत्वारो ऽमी सदैव हि
na pirajñātavāṃstatra kā tu sā girikanyakā nātrāścaryaṃ na paśyanti catvāro 'mī sadaiva hi
そこで彼は彼女を見分けられなかった――その山より生まれた乙女とは、いったい誰であったのか。これに驚くには及ばない。というのも、この四者は常に何も見ないからである。
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "hasya", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
‘Girikanyakā’ is Girijā—Pārvatī—so called because she is ‘born of the mountain’ (traditionally the Himālaya). The verse highlights Andhaka’s failure to recognize the Goddess’s true identity.
The next verse enumerates them as four kinds of blindness: congenital blindness, passion-blindness, intoxication-madness, and greed-driven blindness. The ‘four’ are thus moral-psychological conditions, not four persons.
Only indirectly through the epithet ‘mountain-maiden.’ The verse itself does not name Himālaya, a river, or a pilgrimage site; it remains within narrative description.