Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
वृत्ते मुनिर्विवाहे तु शक्रादीन् प्राह दैवतान् अस्मिस्तीर्थे भवद्भिस्तु सप्तगोदावरे सदा
vṛtte munirvivāhe tu śakrādīn prāha daivatān asmistīrthe bhavadbhistu saptagodāvare sadā
इमे मृगोन्द्रवदनाः शूलबाणधनुर्धराः। गणास्त्वद्रोमसंभूता वीरभद्रपुरोगमाः॥
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
It asserts deva-sannidhya: the tirtha is not merely commemorative but continuously empowered by the abiding presence of Indra and other gods, making it perpetually efficacious for rites and pilgrimage.
Indra commonly heads deva-lists in Purāṇic diction; invoking him first signals a formal address to the entire divine assembly and underscores the cosmic recognition of the tirtha.
By tying a named Godāvarī tirtha (Saptagodāvarī) to a concrete ritual-historical episode and then declaring ongoing divine presence, the text converts narrative into a durable geographic-sacral marker for pilgrims.