Jabali Bound on the Banyan Tree and Nandayanti’s Appeal at Sri-Kantha on the Yamuna
तत्र स्थिताया रम्भोरु ख्याता देववती शुभा आगमिष्यति दैत्यस्य पुत्री कन्दरमालिनः
tatra sthitāyā rambhoru khyātā devavatī śubhā āgamiṣyati daityasya putrī kandaramālinaḥ
“When you remain stationed there, O one with beautiful thighs (Rambhoru), the auspicious and renowned Devavatī will come—she who is the daughter of the Daitya Kandaramālin.”
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Devavatī is presented as a renowned, auspicious woman whose arrival is significant for the tīrtha’s narrative. Purāṇas often mark tīrthas as meeting-points where beings of diverse lineages—Deva, Asura, human, and ascetic—converge; naming her as a Daitya’s daughter highlights the tīrtha’s integrative power and the crossing of cosmic/social boundaries.
‘Rambhoru’ is a conventional kāvya-style epithet meaning ‘one with thighs like Rambhā (the celestial nymph),’ used to address or describe a woman of striking beauty; it does not necessarily identify Rambhā herself.
Not directly; it presupposes the location already established in the surrounding passage. The explicit geographical anchors—Saptagodāvarī and Hāṭaka—appear in the next verses, especially v.71.