Varuṇābhiṣeka–Agni-anveṣaṇa–Kaubera-tīrtha
Varuṇa’s Consecration; Search for Agni; Kaubera Sacred Site
क्षुककर्णी चतुष्कर्णी कर्णप्रावरणा तथा । चतुष्यथनिकेता च गोकर्णी महिषानना
kṣukakarṇī catuṣkarṇī karṇaprāvaraṇā tathā | catuṣyathaniketā ca gokarṇī mahiṣānanā
Vaiśampāyana sprach: „(Da waren Wesen) namens Kṣukakarṇī, Catuṣkarṇī und Karṇaprāvaraṇā; ebenso Catuṣyathaniketā, Gokarṇī und Mahiṣānanā.“
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse underscores how the epic uses lists of uncanny, liminal figures as moral atmosphere: when adharma dominates and catastrophe nears, the world is portrayed as disturbed, and ominous presences multiply—prompting reflection on ethical collapse and its cosmic/social repercussions.
Vaiśampāyana is enumerating named beings characterized by striking physical epithets (e.g., ‘four-eared’, ‘buffalo-faced’). This cataloging intensifies the sense of dread and abnormality around the late-war setting in Śalya Parva.