Andhaka’s Coronation, Boons from Shiva, and the Daiva–Asura War (Vahana Catalogues)
गृध्रकङ्कमहाहंसा श्येनचक्रआह्वमण्डिता वनवायसकादम्बा गोमायुश्वापदाकुला
gṛdhrakaṅkamahāhaṃsā śyenacakraāhvamaṇḍitā vanavāyasakādambā gomāyuśvāpadākulā
সেয়া গিধ, বক আৰু মহাহংসৰে শোভিত আছিল; শ্যেন আৰু শিকারি পক্ষীৰ চিহ্নে চিহ্নিত; বন-কাক আৰু হাঁহেৰে পৰিপূৰ্ণ, আৰু শিয়াল তথা অন্য হিংস্ৰ জন্তুৰে আকুল আছিল।
{ "primaryRasa": "bibhatsa", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The passage underscores the liminal, testing quality of certain landscapes: the pilgrim/hero must move through zones of fear and disorder. Such descriptions function as a reminder that dharma is maintained not in comfort but amid risk, vigilance, and self-control.
It aligns most closely with tīrtha-prasaṃśā / kṣetra-māhātmya material that Purāṇas often embed within broader vamśānucarita or narrative frames. It is not sarga/pratisarga proper; it is descriptive-legendary geography supporting sacred-place discourse.
Birds of prey and scavengers (vultures, hawks) alongside jackals evoke a field of death and impermanence—an image that can symbolically ‘purify’ attachment and pride before one reaches sanctified space. The ‘adornment’ is intentionally grim: it sacralizes the boundary by portraying it as formidable.