Adhyaya 85 — The Gods’ Hymn to the Goddess and the Emergence of Kaushiki; Shumbha Sends His Envoy
सा त्वं गच्छ मयैवोक्ता पार्श्वं शुम्भनिशुम्भयोः ।
केशाकर्षणनिर्धूतगौरवा मा गमिष्यसि ॥
sā tvaṃ gaccha mayaivoktā pārśvaṃ śumbhaniśumbhayoḥ | keśākarṣaṇanirdhūtagauravā mā gamiṣyasi ||
«Así que ve —así te lo he dicho— al lado de Śumbha y Niśumbha. No vayas a acabar yendo allí con tu dignidad quebrantada, arrastrada por el cabello.»
The asuric mindset escalates from persuasion to coercion. The text condemns forced possession and foretells its reversal: violence aimed at the sacred rebounds upon the violent.
Narrative (ākhyāna) within manvantara; it functions as a moral exemplum about adharma’s methods and their downfall.
Hair-dragging symbolizes the attempt to control the ‘crown’ (śiras) of consciousness by force. Śakti cannot be compelled; attempts to dominate the inner power lead to psychic fragmentation for the aggressor.