Jabali Bound by the Monkey — Jabali Bound by the Monkey: Nandayanti’s Ordeal and the Yamuna–Hiranyavati Sacred Corridor
स चापि वानरो देव्या कालिन्द्या वेगते हृतः नीतः शिवीति विख्याते देशं शुभजनावृतम्
sa cāpi vānaro devyā kālindyā vegate hṛtaḥ nītaḥ śivīti vikhyāte deśaṃ śubhajanāvṛtam
ស្វានោះផងដែរ ត្រូវបានលំហូរទឹករបស់ទេវី កាលិន្ទី បោកបក់យកទៅ ហើយត្រូវបាននាំទៅកាន់ដែនដីដែលល្បីថា «សិវីទី» ជាទីកន្លែងពោរពេញដោយមនុស្សល្អប្រសើរ។
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Purāṇas regularly personify major rivers as goddesses. Calling Kāliṇdī ‘devī’ signals her sacral status and frames the river’s current as an active, quasi-divine force shaping the story and the geography.
Grammatically it is a place-name: ‘deśaṃ … śivīti vikhyāte’—“to a region known as Śivīti.” The name itself encodes Śiva-association, typical of Purāṇic sacred geography where locales are named from epithets, events, or divine presence.
It indicates a Yamunā-linked locale and a Śaiva-named region reached by the river’s flow. Pinpointing the exact historical/terrestrial identification would require the surrounding verses that describe landmarks, nearby forests, or ritual fruits (phalaśruti).