Jabali Bound on the Banyan Tree and Nandayanti’s Appeal at Sri-Kantha on the Yamuna
किं वा ते बहुनोक्तेन मा त्वं नाशं नराधिप गच्छस्व शुक्रशापेन सभृत्यज्ञातिबान्धवः
kiṃ vā te bahunoktena mā tvaṃ nāśaṃ narādhipa gacchasva śukraśāpena sabhṛtyajñātibāndhavaḥ
Ngunit ano ang silbi ng maraming salita? O panginoon ng mga tao, huwag kang mapahamak—baka sa sumpa ni Śukra ay mawalan ka ng mga tagapaglingkod, mga kamag-anak, at mga kaibigan.
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Śukra (Uśanas) is the famed guru of the Daityas/Asuras, portrayed across Purāṇas as possessing formidable tapas and mantra-knowledge. A ‘śāpa’ from such a figure functions as an irreversible narrative force that can strip a king of support systems—army, allies, and kin.
It lists the social pillars of kingship: retainers (administrative/military), kin (dynastic backing), and allies/friends (political networks). The curse threatens not merely personal suffering but total collapse of sovereignty and social standing.
All three: morally it urges restraint; politically it warns of losing one’s base of power; supernaturally it invokes the Purāṇic principle that adharma or transgression against a potent sage/ācārya triggers catastrophic consequences.