Jabali Bound by the Monkey — Jabali Bound by the Monkey: Nandayanti’s Ordeal and the Yamuna–Hiranyavati Sacred Corridor
अथापश्यत् समायान्तमञ्जनं गुह्यकोत्तमम् नन्दयन्त्या समं पुत्र्या गत्वा जिगमिषुः कपिः
athāpaśyat samāyāntamañjanaṃ guhyakottamam nandayantyā samaṃ putryā gatvā jigamiṣuḥ kapiḥ
แล้ววานรผู้ตั้งใจจะไปยังที่นั้น ได้เห็นอัญชนา ผู้ประเสริฐยิ่งในหมู่คุหยกะ กำลังมาใกล้ พร้อมด้วยนันทยันตีและธิดาของนาง
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Guhyakas are semi-divine beings associated with Kubera and with ‘hidden’ (guhya) places—caves, forests, and liminal sacred geographies. Calling Anjanā ‘guhyakottamā’ elevates her status and signals that the episode belongs to a tirtha-landscape where such beings guard or inhabit sacred zones.
In this śloka the grammar and epithets (‘guhyakottamā’) indicate a person approaching, not a place. However, Purāṇic tīrtha narratives often personify or closely associate figures with specific bathing-places; the name may also echo a local tīrtha tradition.
Their presence frames the scene as a social/ritual movement toward a sacred act (often bathing or visiting a tīrtha). It also sets up recognition, misunderstanding, or fear in the subsequent verses, which is a common Purāṇic device to transition into the tīrtha’s ‘mahima’ (power/legend).