Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
यो ऽसौ युवा नीलघनप्रकाशः संदृश्यते दीर्घभुजः सूरूपः स एव नूनं नरदेवसूनुर्वृतो मया पूर्वतरं पतिर्यः
yo 'sau yuvā nīlaghanaprakāśaḥ saṃdṛśyate dīrghabhujaḥ sūrūpaḥ sa eva nūnaṃ naradevasūnurvṛto mayā pūrvataraṃ patiryaḥ
ಅಲ್ಲಿ ಕಾಣಿಸುವ ಆ ಯುವಕನು—ನೀಲಮೇಘದಂತೆ ಶ್ಯಾಮ, ದೀರ್ಘಭುಜ, ಸುಂದರ—ಅವನೇ ನಿಶ್ಚಯವಾಗಿ ರಾಜಪುತ್ರನು; ನಾನು ಹಿಂದೆ ಪತಿಯಾಗಿ ವರಿಸಿದವನು ಅವನೇ।
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Not necessarily. While such imagery is famously used for Viṣṇu/Kṛṣṇa, Purāṇic kāvya-style also applies it to exemplary human heroes. In this verse the identification is explicitly social: ‘nara-deva-sūnu’—the king’s son.
It indicates a prior formal choice of spouse—often the idiom of svayaṃvara (bride’s selection). The verse frames the encounter as recognition of a previously chosen husband, setting up a backstory or reunion motif.
Tīrthas in the Vāmana Purāṇa frequently serve as narrative junctions: sacred geography becomes the stage where past karmic ties, vows, and social identities re-emerge. The sanctified setting legitimizes the unfolding reunion as dharmically meaningful rather than accidental.