The Account of Kārtavīrya’s Protective Kavaca
Kārtavīrya-kavaca-vṛttānta
कालव्याला महादंष्ट्रा महाजगरसंज्ञकाः । अनंतशूलिकाद्याश्च दंष्ट्राविषमहाभयाः ॥ ७९ ॥
kālavyālā mahādaṃṣṭrā mahājagarasaṃjñakāḥ | anaṃtaśūlikādyāśca daṃṣṭrāviṣamahābhayāḥ || 79 ||
Es gibt Schlangen namens Kālavyāla, Mahādaṃṣṭrā und Mahājagara; und andere wie Anantaśūlikā — furchterregend durch das Gift in ihren Fangzähnen, eine große Ursache des Schreckens.
Narada (in dialogue context with the Sanatkumara tradition; verse functions as a catalog within the technical section)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
By naming specific fearsome serpents and emphasizing fang-poison, the verse highlights the Purana’s applied wisdom: dharma includes recognizing real dangers and seeking protection through disciplined, scripture-aligned means rather than panic.
Indirectly, it frames worldly fear as something to be faced with steadiness; in the Narada Purana’s broader teaching, such fear is ultimately calmed through refuge in the Divine (especially Vishnu-bhakti) alongside proper conduct.
This is a technical enumeration typical of Book 1.3’s applied learning—useful for ritual-practical contexts (identification of dangers and the need for protective measures), aligning with auxiliary knowledge streams used in rites and traditional remedies.