सुवर्णवर्णो निर्धूम: सड़तोर्ध्वशिख: कवि: । क्रुद्धेनाड़िरसा शप्तो गुणैरेतैर्विवर्जित:
arjuna uvāca | suvarṇavarṇo nirdhūmaḥ sadotrdhvaśikhaḥ kaviḥ | kruddhenāṅgirasā śapto guṇair etair vivarjitaḥ ||
阿周那说道:“往昔,阿耆尼(Agni)金色辉耀,无烟,其焰恒向上腾。然愤怒充盈的圣仙安吉罗萨(Aṅgiras)对他宣下诅咒;因此阿耆尼如今失却了先前那些德相。”
अजुन उवाच
The verse highlights the ethical consequence of anger and the potency of a sage’s speech: even a cosmic power like Agni can lose auspicious qualities when subjected to a curse born of wrath, underscoring restraint and responsibility in word and emotion.
Arjuna describes Agni’s former ideal nature—golden, smokeless, and with an upward flame—and explains that these traits were lost because the sage Aṅgiras, angered, cursed Agni, resulting in Agni’s present altered condition.