The rishi Durvasa, being short-tempered, is said to have both cursed and gifted boons to several notable deities and people in the Hindu scriptures. Some of them include:
Curses •
Indra, whom he cursed to lose all his powers, after Indra's elephant
Airavata threw down a rather fragrant garland given by Durvasa to Indra. •
Saraswati, whom he cursed to be born as a human because she laughed at his incorrect recitation of the Vedas.
Ubhay Bharati is believed to be the human incarnation of the Goddess Saraswati on the earth during 8th Century CE. •
Rukmini, whom he cursed to be separated from her husband, Krishna, because she drank water without seeking Durvasa's permission. •
Shakuntala, who was so engrossed in thoughts of her husband
Dushyanta that she did not offer Durvasa hospitality while at the ashrama (hermitage) of sage Kanva, which enraged Durvasa rishi, who cursed her that Dushyanta would forget her. Durvasa later relented that
Dushyanta would remember her when she presented his ring (that he had previously given to her) to him. • Kandali, his wife, whom he cursed to be reduced to a heap of dust for excessively quarrelling with him. •
Bhanumati, the daughter of Banu, the erstwhile leader of the
Yadavas. Bhanumati provoked Durvasa while playing at the garden of
Raivata, and in response, Durvasa cursed her. She, later in life, is abducted by the Danava Nikumbha. However, Durvasa clarified (after being pacified) that no harm would come to Bhanumati, and that she would be saved go on to marry the
Pandava Sahadeva. •
Ambarisha was a pious king who was a great devotee of
Vishnu. The King received Durvasa as his guest and waited for a long time for him to return from his bath in the
Yamuna, which the sage unreasonably delayed. In order to prevent demerit by not breaking
Vaikuntha Ekadashi fast at the proper time, upon the advice of his priests, the king broke his fast by taking a little water, and waited for the arrival of sage Durvasa to offer him food. Durvasa was enraged at the King breaking his fast before feeding him and created his own discus or demon (depending on the sources) to attack the King to punish him.
Vishnu sent his
Sudarshana Chakra to the rescue and it destroyed all of Durvasa's creations to harm the King and chased the sage across the three worlds to teach him a lesson, until he returned and begged the King for forgiveness.
Boons •
Krishna, whom he blessed with partial invulnerability. The
Anushasana Parva, as related by Krishna to his son
Pradyumna details the incident when Durvasa visited Krishna at
Dvaraka, and requested that Krishna smear his own body with the
payasam remaining after Durvasa had eaten. Krishna complied with this, and Durvasa blessed him with invulnerability in those parts of his body that he covered with the payasam, noting that Krishna never smeared the soles of his feet with it. Krishna would die years after the events of the
Kurukshetra war by an arrow to his foot shot by a hunter who mistook it for a deer. •
Kunti, whom he taught
mantras capable of summoning a
deva to beget children.
Karna is born to Kunti, and later the five Pandava brothers are born of Kunti's and her co-wife
Madri's use of the mantras. •
Draupadi who gave him her clothes when his clothes were once swept away. Durvasa blessed her by saying that she would never lack clothes at the time of requirement, and it is due to his blessing that
Dushasan was unable to strip off her clothes in the gambling hall due to lord krishna's presence, thus protecting her modesty. ==Origin==