Skanda’s Svastyayana and the Slaying of Taraka and Mahisha
पुलस्त्य उवाच एवं कृतस्वस्त्ययनो गुहः शक्तिधरो ऽग्रणीः प्रणिपत्य सुरान् सर्वान् समुत्पतत भूतलात्
pulastya uvāca evaṃ kṛtasvastyayano guhaḥ śaktidharo 'graṇīḥ praṇipatya surān sarvān samutpatata bhūtalāt
قال بولاستيا: «وهكذا، بعد أن أتمَّ طقس السڤاستيَيانا (svastyayana) للحماية المباركة، انحنى غوها (Guha)—حامل الرمح والقائد المتقدّم—ساجدًا لجميع الآلهة، ثم ارتفع من سطح الأرض (وأقلع طائرًا).»
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Svastyayana denotes a formal act of securing well-being—typically mantra-recitation and benediction that wards off obstacles. In narrative sequences it often marks completion of a protective liturgy before travel, battle, or a divine mission.
‘Guha’ is a devotional epithet emphasizing the deity’s mysterious/hidden nature and inner presence, while ‘Śaktidhara’ highlights his iconic weapon (the spear/śakti). The pairing signals both theological identity and recognizable iconography.
Purāṇic diction allows both. Given the following verse’s mention of bird-like, shape-shifting attendants, the line strongly suggests literal aerial departure, while also functioning as a narrative hinge from ritual space to journey-space.