HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 150Shloka 155

Shloka 155

Matsya Purana — War of Devas and Dānavas: Yama and Kubera Defeated; Kālanemi’s Māyā and the A...

शरौ च द्वौ महाभागो दिव्यावाशीविषद्युती संचारास्त्रेण संधाय बाणमेकं ससर्ज सः //

śarau ca dvau mahābhāgo divyāvāśīviṣadyutī saṃcārāstreṇa saṃdhāya bāṇamekaṃ sasarja saḥ //

That illustrious hero, taking two arrows—shining like divine, razor-edged blades—joined them by the missile called Saṃcāra and then discharged them as a single arrow.

शरौ (śarau)two arrows
शरौ (śarau):
च (ca)and
च (ca):
द्वौ (dvau)two
द्वौ (dvau):
महाभागः (mahābhāgaḥ)the illustrious one / noble hero
महाभागः (mahābhāgaḥ):
दिव्य (divya)divine
दिव्य (divya):
आवाशीविषद्युती (āvāśī-viṣa-dyutī)shining like a sharp blade/razor (lit. blade-like, venom-bright—i.e., intensely gleaming and deadly)
आवाशीविषद्युती (āvāśī-viṣa-dyutī):
संचारास्त्रेण (saṃcārāstreṇa)with the Saṃcāra-weapon/missile (a combining/propelling astric technique)
संचारास्त्रेण (saṃcārāstreṇa):
संधाय (saṃdhāya)having joined, fitted, combined
संधाय (saṃdhāya):
बाणम् (bāṇam)an arrow
बाणम् (bāṇam):
एकम् (ekam)one, single
एकम् (ekam):
ससर्ज (sasarja)he hurled, discharged
ससर्ज (sasarja):
सः (saḥ)he.
सः (saḥ):
Suta (narrator) describing the combat action (likely within Matsya’s broader discourse/narration frame)
AstrasDivine weaponsEpic combatMatsya Purana narrative

FAQs

This verse is not about pralaya; it focuses on astric technique in combat—specifically, combining two arrows into a single discharge using the Saṃcāra missile.

Indirectly, it reflects the Kshatriya ethic praised in Purāṇic literature: disciplined, technically skilled use of force (astra-vidyā) for protection and righteous warfare rather than reckless violence.

No Vāstu or temple-ritual instruction appears here; the technical focus is on weapons science (astra-prayoga), describing a method of joining missiles for a single, intensified shot.