Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
न कश्चित्तात केनापि बध्यते हन्यते ऽपि वा वधबन्धौ पूर्वकर्मवश्यौ नृपतिनन्दन
na kaścittāta kenāpi badhyate hanyate 'pi vā vadhabandhau pūrvakarmavaśyau nṛpatinandana
न कश्चित्तात केनापि बध्यते हन्यतेऽपि वा। वधबन्धौ पूर्वकर्मवश्यौ नृपतिनन्दन॥
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
It rhetorically shifts the ultimate causality to karma-phala: the immediate agent may act, but the fruition (binding/slaying) is said to occur because prior deeds have matured. This is a common Purāṇic way to interpret suffering without denying ethical accountability.
The pair covers two typical outcomes in royal/war contexts—capture and death—indicating that whether one is imprisoned or slain, the deeper cause is the ripening of past actions.
The verse addresses a princely figure within the embedded story. Even without the surrounding verses, the honorific signals a didactic moment aimed at royal dharma: rulers must act, yet understand the karmic web behind outcomes.