Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
तपसा कर्शितं दीनं मलपङ्कजटाधरम् निःश्वासायासपरमं प्रथमे वयसि स्थितम्
tapasā karśitaṃ dīnaṃ malapaṅkajaṭādharam niḥśvāsāyāsaparamaṃ prathame vayasi sthitam
他们见到他——因苦行而枯槁消瘦,形容凄然;顶戴纠结的髻发(jaṭā),沾满污垢与泥浆;气息喘促、劳顿至极——然而仍安住于人生第一阶段(青春之期)。
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Here dīna describes outward appearance (frail, worn), not moral deficiency. Purāṇic style often juxtaposes a ‘pitiable’ body with extraordinary inner power to heighten the ascetic’s spiritual authority.
It indicates youth or early life-stage, stressing that the tapas is undertaken before worldly maturity—an intensification motif: severe renunciation is more striking when performed in youth rather than old age.
These are conventional markers of forest-ascetic life (vānaprastha/muni imagery). They signal withdrawal from social grooming norms and immersion in wilderness practice, reinforcing the ashrama’s sacral-ascetic atmosphere.