Matsya Purana — War of Devas and Dānavas: Yama and Kubera Defeated; Kālanemi’s Māyā and the A...
महिषो दानवेन्द्रस्तु कल्पान्ताम्भोदसंनिभः अस्त्रं चकार सावित्रम् उल्कासंघातमण्डितम् //
mahiṣo dānavendrastu kalpāntāmbhodasaṃnibhaḥ astraṃ cakāra sāvitram ulkāsaṃghātamaṇḍitam //
Mahisha, lord of the Dānavas, dark as rain-clouds at the end of an aeon, then unleashed the Sāvitra weapon, adorned with a showering mass of meteoric firebrands.
It uses pralaya-era imagery—“clouds at the end of the kalpa”—to portray Mahisha’s overwhelming, world-darkening power, linking the battle’s intensity to cosmic dissolution symbolism.
Indirectly, it contrasts dharmic restraint with asuric force: the Danava king’s deployment of destructive astras serves as a narrative warning that power without dharma becomes calamity-like, a key ethical undercurrent in Purāṇic kingship ideals.
The verse is primarily martial and cosmological, but the term “Sāvitra” points to solar (Savitṛ) sacral power—suggesting a ritual-theological classification of weapons (astravidyā) rather than any Vāstu or temple-building rule.