Kārttikeya-Abhiṣecana: Mātṛgaṇa-Nāma Saṃkīrtana and Skanda’s Commission
पाणिकूर्चश्न॒ शम्बूक: पञ्चवक्त्रश्न शिक्षक: | चाषवक्त्रश्न जम्बूक: शाकवक्त्रश्न कुडउजल:
pāṇikūrcaśna śambūkaḥ pañcavaktraśna śikṣakaḥ | cāṣavaktraśna jambūkaḥ śākavaktraśna kuḍūjalaḥ ||
Vaiśampāyana said: “There were beings named Śambūka, the ‘hand-tufted’ one; Śikṣaka, the ‘five-faced’ one; Jambūka, the ‘crow-faced’ one; and Kuḍūjala, the ‘vegetable-faced’ one.”
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse contributes to the epic’s ethical atmosphere by portraying abnormal, grotesque, or portent-like figures—suggesting that when adharma dominates and mass violence peaks, the world’s order appears inverted and ominous signs proliferate.
Vaiśampāyana is listing named figures with striking descriptive epithets (e.g., ‘five-faced’, ‘crow-faced’). The passage reads like a catalog of strange beings/omens, intensifying the sense of dread and moral chaos surrounding the war’s climax.