HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 39Shloka 136
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Vamana Purana — Shukra's Curse on King Danda, Shloka 136

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

तत्रामन्त्र्य महावीर्यं कपिः कन्दरमालिनम् पातालादभिनिष्क्रम्य महीं पर्यचरज्जवी

tatrāmantrya mahāvīryaṃ kapiḥ kandaramālinam pātālādabhiniṣkramya mahīṃ paryacarajjavī

ณ ที่นั้น วานรได้ล่ำลาวีรบุรุษผู้ทรงเดชชื่อกัณฑรมาลิน แล้วออกจากปาตาล ขึ้นมาท่องไปทั่วแผ่นดินโดยรวดเร็ว।

Narrator voice within the Purāṇic dialogue context (chapter narrative) describing the kapi’s movement; explicit interlocutors not stated in the verse.
Transition from netherworld to terrestrial sacred landscapePilgrimage-like traversal (tīrtha-saṅgati) embedded in mythic narrativeMythic geography (vertical cosmology: Pātāla–Bhūmi)

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

FAQs

The verse presents a vānaric agent (kapi) as a narrative mover—common in Purāṇic storytelling—whose travel functions to connect realms (Pātāla to Bhūmi) and to introduce a chain of tīrthas. Even when not identified with Hanumān, “kapi” can serve as a swift messenger/traveler enabling the text’s geographic cataloguing.

Pātāla signals vertical cosmology: sacred geography is not only horizontal (rivers, cities) but also layered (nether regions, earth, heavens). The ascent from Pātāla frames the subsequent earthly tīrtha encounters as part of a cosmic itinerary.

Grammatically it is a proper name in the accusative, treated as a person/being of great valor. The epithet suggests association with caves or mountainous clefts, which often marks beings tied to liminal terrains (caverns, subterranean passages) that connect to Pātāla motifs.