Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
जग्मुर्हृष्टा रथेभ्यस्ते घृताची दिवमुत्पतत् तामन्वेव महावेगः स कपिः प्लवतां वरः
jagmurhṛṣṭā rathebhyaste ghṛtācī divamutpatat tāmanveva mahāvegaḥ sa kapiḥ plavatāṃ varaḥ
அவர்கள் மகிழ்ச்சியுடன் ரதங்களிலிருந்து புறப்பட்டனர்; க்ருதாசி விண்ணுலகிற்கு பாய்ந்து சென்றாள். அவளைத் தொடர்ந்து, மிகுந்த வேகமுடைய, தாவுபவர்களில் சிறந்த அந்தக் கபியும் சென்றான்.
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It marks her as a celestial being whose movements transcend human geography, and it propels the plot toward a union or encounter that will produce the foretold mighty offspring.
These epithets establish the kapi as uniquely capable of pursuing a heavenly apsaras—highlighting superhuman vigor and setting up the plausibility of crossing realms.
Even within geography-centered tīrtha sections, the text often embeds mythic episodes that connect a terrestrial sacred landscape (river-bathing, rites) with cosmographic layers (heaven), thereby magnifying the tīrtha’s sanctity and narrative prestige.