Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
प्राप्य विश्रामहेत्वर्थमवतेरुस्त्वरान्विताः तेषां सारथयश्चाश्वान् स्नात्वा पीतोदकाप्लुतान्
prāpya viśrāmahetvarthamavaterustvarānvitāḥ teṣāṃ sārathayaścāśvān snātvā pītodakāplutān
他们到达彼处为求歇息,便迅速下车。其御者随即为马匹沐浴,并令其饮水,使之精神复苏,周身尽湿。
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Purāṇic māhātmyas often include realistic travel details to frame the sanctity of the place: the party’s arrival, rest, and contact with water (snāna) function as narrative cues that they have entered a ritually significant landscape, even when the waterbody is not named in the verse.
In this immediate context it is practical (refreshing the horses), but Purāṇic diction intentionally overlaps the practical and the ritual: ‘being drenched/bathed’ echoes the broader theme of snāna as purification within a sacred geography.