Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
ऋतध्वजः सपुत्रस्तु तं दृष्ट्वा पृथिवीपतिम् प्रोवाच राजन्नेह्योहि करिष्यामि तव प्रियम्
ṛtadhvajaḥ saputrastu taṃ dṛṣṭvā pṛthivīpatim provāca rājannehyohi kariṣyāmi tava priyam
于是,ṛtadhvaja与其子见到大地之主的国王,便说道:“大王,请到这里来——来吧!我将行你所喜悦之事。”
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The term is an honorific meaning ‘lord of the earth,’ used for a reigning king. The verse depicts Ṛtadhvaja formally receiving and inviting the king, a common narrative device before disclosing a tīrtha’s origin or a boon.
Mentioning the son signals dynastic continuity and witness-bearing: the promised act (‘I shall do what pleases you’) is framed as a family-backed commitment, often relevant in Purāṇic accounts of grants, releases, or tīrtha-foundations.
Not directly. In tīrtha-māhātmya passages, human dialogue frequently serves as the bridge into a sacred-geography explanation that later connects to a deity or a sanctifying event.