The Birth and Consecration of Skanda (Kartikeya) at Kurukshetra
ददृशुर्बालमत्युग्रं षण्मुखं सूर्यसंनिभम् मुष्णन्तमिव चक्षुंषि तेजसा स्वेन देवताः
dadṛśurbālamatyugraṃ ṣaṇmukhaṃ sūryasaṃnibham muṣṇantamiva cakṣuṃṣi tejasā svena devatāḥ
Die Götter erblickten ein Kind—überaus furchterregend—, Ṣaṇmukha mit sechs Antlitzen, strahlend wie die Sonne; sein eigener Glanz schien ihnen gleichsam den Blick zu rauben.
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Purāṇic style often juxtaposes youthful form with overwhelming śakti: Skanda appears as a kumāra (child) while embodying martial, cosmic power suited for deva-kārya (the gods’ task).
It is a conventional marker of divine presence: the deity’s tejas exceeds ordinary perception, producing a blinding brilliance that indicates transcendence and irresistible potency.
Not yet; it sets the epiphanic scene. The subsequent verses move from vision (darśana) to action—pilgrimage and abhiṣeka at named tīrthas.