Matsya Purana — War of Devas and Dānavas: Yama and Kubera Defeated; Kālanemi’s Māyā and the A...
मूकास्तदाभवन्दैत्या रणद्दशनपङ्क्तयः तान्दृष्ट्वा नष्टचेतस्कान् दैत्याञ्छीतेन सादितान् //
mūkāstadābhavandaityā raṇaddaśanapaṅktayaḥ tāndṛṣṭvā naṣṭacetaskān daityāñchītena sāditān //
Then the Daityas became mute—though their rows of teeth still clattered amid the din of battle. Seeing those Daityas, their senses gone, struck down and weakened by the cold, (the onlookers beheld them thus).
This verse is not a Pralaya (cosmic dissolution) statement; it uses “cold” as a battle-force that debilitates the Daityas, showing divine or elemental power operating within a mythic conflict rather than cosmic dissolution.
Indirectly, it reinforces a common Purāṇic ethic: adharmic aggressors (here, Daityas) lose strength and clarity, while righteous order is upheld—an implied lesson for rulers to maintain dharma and for householders to avoid adharmic conduct that leads to ruin.
No Vāstu, temple-building, or ritual procedure is stated in this verse; it is purely a vivid battlefield depiction emphasizing the demons’ collapse under a chilling force.