Jabali Bound on the Banyan Tree and Nandayanti’s Appeal at Sri-Kantha on the Yamuna
शुक्रः कदाचिदगमद् वृषुपर्वाणमासुरम् तेनार्चितश्चिरं तत्र तस्थौ भार्गवसत्त्मः
śukraḥ kadācidagamad vṛṣuparvāṇamāsuram tenārcitaściraṃ tatra tasthau bhārgavasattmaḥ
有一次,圣者舒克罗(Śukra)前往阿修罗弗利沙帕尔梵(Vṛṣaparvan)处。受其恭敬供奉,这位卓越的婆罗伽婆(Bhārgava)在彼处久留。
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Vṛṣaparvan is an Asura ruler known from wider mythic cycles (notably connected with the Śukra–Asura milieu and lineages that intersect with later Daitya narratives).
Arcita can include formal reception and reverential honoring, often with offerings; in Purāṇic diction it can shade into quasi-ritual veneration of a revered guru.
A long residence indicates sustained advisory influence—political, ritual, and strategic—setting the stage for household and lineage developments involving Śukra’s family and the Asura court.