दुर्वासाशापः, क्षीरसागरमन्थनम्, श्रीः (लक्ष्मी) उद्भवः तथा श्रीस्तुतिः
गौतमादिभिर् अन्यैस् त्वं गर्वम् आपादितो मुधा अक्षान्तिसारसर्वस्वं दुर्वाससम् अवेहि माम्
gautamādibhir anyais tvaṃ garvam āpādito mudhā akṣāntisārasarvasvaṃ durvāsasam avehi mām
Iludido por Gautama e outros rishis, inchaste de um orgulho vão. Sabe que eu sou Durvāsas: minha essência é a intolerância feroz, e minha riqueza, uma ira insuportável.
Sage Durvāsas (addressing a king in the royal-lineage narrative of Ansha 4)
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: How Indra’s pride, inflated by other sages’ praise, leads to conflict with Durvāsas
Teaching: Ethical
Quality: admonitory
Concept: Worldly status and even divine rulership become hollow when inflated by praise; unchecked ego provokes downfall.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Treat compliments as tests, cultivate kṣamā (forbearance) and accountability, and seek correction rather than validation.
Vishishtadvaita: The Lord’s governance operates through dharma; arrogance disrupts one’s alignment with the divine order sustained by Him.
This verse frames pride as a delusion cultivated by bad counsel; it becomes the immediate cause for a rishi’s punitive response, showing that kingship must remain humble and dharmic to align with cosmic order.
Durvāsas self-identifies as the embodiment of akṣānti (unforbearance), emphasizing the feared potency of ascetics whose anger functions as a narrative instrument of moral correction.
Even when Vishnu is not named in the verse, the Purana’s worldview assumes that dharma and rightful sovereignty operate under Vishnu’s supreme governance; violations like arrogance trigger corrective consequences that restore order.