Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
ते ऽधिरुह्य रथांस्तूर्णं मार्गन्ते वसुधां क्रमात् बदर्याश्रममासाद्य ददृशुस्तपसां निधिम्
te 'dhiruhya rathāṃstūrṇaṃ mārgante vasudhāṃ kramāt badaryāśramamāsādya dadṛśustapasāṃ nidhim
ពួកគេឡើងជិះរទេះយ៉ាងលឿន ហើយធ្វើដំណើរតាមផ្លូវលើផែនដីជាបន្តបន្ទាប់; ដល់អាស្រាមបដរីយ៉ា ពួកគេបានឃើញឃ្លាំងទ្រព្យនៃតបស្យា គឺអ្នកបួសមានតបៈដ៏មហិមា។
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Badaryāśrama is a major Himalayan tīrtha centered on the ‘Badarī’ (jujube/ber) grove tradition. Across Purāṇas it functions as a paradigmatic ascetic landscape—remote, pure, and suited for extreme tapas.
The phrase is an epithet meaning ‘one who is a repository of austerity.’ The next verse’s description (emaciated, matted hair, worn by breath and exertion) clarifies that it is a powerful ascetic rather than a literal ‘place’ of tapas.
Purāṇic narration often foregrounds movement through named sacred sites to sacralize geography. Even when only one tīrtha is named, the diction frames the journey as a dharmic progression culminating in a transformative encounter.