Matsya Purana — War of Devas and Dānavas: Yama and Kubera Defeated; Kālanemi’s Māyā and the A...
जघान घननीहारतिमिरातुरवाहनाम् वध्यमानेषु दैत्येषु कुजम्भे मूढचेतसि //
jaghāna ghananīhāratimirāturavāhanām vadhyamāneṣu daityeṣu kujambhe mūḍhacetasi //
Amid thick fog and darkness, he struck down the one whose mount was in distress; and while the Daityas were being slain, Kujambha—his mind deluded—stood confounded.
This verse does not discuss pralaya or cosmology; it is a battlefield description emphasizing confusion, darkness, and the slaying of Daityas.
Indirectly, it reflects the Purāṇic ideal of confronting adharma: the righteous side decisively subdues destructive forces (Daityas), while delusion (mūḍhacetā) leads to paralysis—an implied warning for rulers to act with clarity.
No Vāstu, temple iconography, or ritual procedure is mentioned; the verse is purely narrative, focused on combat imagery and the mental bewilderment of Kujambha.