Sukeshi’s Inquiry into Dharma: The Seven Dvipas and the Twenty-One Hells
रथं सारथिना सार्धं साश्वध्वजसकूबम् भस्म कृत्वाथ कुलिशमन्धकं समुपाययौ
rathaṃ sārathinā sārdhaṃ sāśvadhvajasakūbam bhasma kṛtvātha kuliśamandhakaṃ samupāyayau
Having reduced the chariot—together with its charioteer, horses, banner, and pole—to ashes, he then advanced toward Andhaka, bearing the kuliśa (the thunderbolt-like weapon).
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The collapse of the chariot retinue (vehicle, driver, horses, insignia) highlights the fragility of external supports and status-symbols in conflict; only inner resolve and dharma-aligned power endure.
Carita/Vamśānucarita: a combat-focused narrative segment within the broader purāṇic history/legend cycles rather than sarga/pratisarga.
Reducing the chariot complex to ash symbolizes the annihilation of ego-structures (ratha as embodied apparatus) before confronting the core adversary (Andhaka). The kuliśa/vajra motif signifies irresistible, dharma-charged potency.