Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
तदुत्तष्ठस्व गच्छावः पुच्छावः क इमे स्थिते कन्यके अनुपश्ये हि पुण्करस्योत्तरे तटे
taduttaṣṭhasva gacchāvaḥ pucchāvaḥ ka ime sthite kanyake anupaśye hi puṇkarasyottare taṭe
それゆえ起きよ。行って、ここに立つこの者たちが誰であるか尋ねよう。乙女よ、私はプシュカラの北岸に彼らを見ているのだから。
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Directional markers are central to Purāṇic sacred geography. Different banks and quarters of a tīrtha can have distinct ritual valences, associated shrines, or narrative events; specifying ‘uttara’ helps map the episode onto the tīrtha’s internal topography.
It grammatically confirms two participants acting together—here, the speaker and the maiden—highlighting companionship and shared witness in the tīrtha setting, a common motif in pilgrimage narratives.
Puṣkara is treated as a major tīrtha-locus (often centered on a lake), functioning as a node where sacred presence, ritual merit, and narrative encounters converge. Even when the broader chapter is narrative, the text anchors events to precise tīrtha coordinates like banks and directions.