HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 39Shloka 118
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Vamana Purana — Shukra's Curse on King Danda, Shloka 118

Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva

यश्चैव जाम्बूवनदतुल्यवर्णः श्वेतं जटाभारमधारयिष्यत् स एष नूनं तपतां वरिष्ठो ऋतध्वजो नात्र विचारमस्ति

yaścaiva jāmbūvanadatulyavarṇaḥ śvetaṃ jaṭābhāramadhārayiṣyat sa eṣa nūnaṃ tapatāṃ variṣṭho ṛtadhvajo nātra vicāramasti

జాంబూ ఫలవర్ణంతో సమానమైన కాంతి కలిగి, తెల్లని జటాభారాన్ని ధరించబోయే వాడే నిశ్చయంగా తపస్వులలో శ్రేష్ఠుడు—ఋతధ్వజుడు; ఇందులో సందేహం లేదు।

Narrative voice within the episode (identification of a person by ascetic marks); immediate interlocutors are clarified in the next verses (Nandayantī speaking).
Śiva (Śaṃbhu)
Ascetic iconography (jaṭā, varṇa)Recognition of a mahātapasvinṚta (cosmic order/truth) as a spiritual ideal

{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

Purāṇas often use natural comparanda (fruits, metals, lotuses) to convey a recognizable sacred physiognomy. ‘Jāmbū’ suggests a dark, glossy hue—frequently associated with spiritual potency and a distinctive, memorable identity marker in narrative recognition scenes.

Etymologically, ṛta denotes cosmic truth/order (a Vedic concept), and dhvaja is a banner/standard. The compound can signal a person whose ‘standard’ is truth—i.e., one aligned with dharma and cosmic order—fitting for a ‘foremost ascetic’.

Yes. Jaṭā marks renunciation and tapas; ‘white’ can indicate age, purity, or an otherworldly radiance. In Purāṇic narrative, such details function as identifiers and as moral-spiritual cues about the person’s attained status.