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Shloka 19

Adhyaya 90The Slaying of Shumbha and the Reabsorption of the Goddesses into Ambika

नियुद्धं खे तदा दैत्यश्चण्डिका च परस्परम् ।

चक्रतुः प्रथमं सिद्धमुनिविस्मयकारकम् ॥

niyuddhaṃ khe tadā daityaś caṇḍikā ca parasparam /

cakratuḥ prathamaṃ siddhamunivismayakārakam

Entonces el Daitya y Caṇḍikā trabaron combate cuerpo a cuerpo en el cielo—al principio—un encuentro que llenó de asombro a los sabios consumados.

Narrative voice within the Devī Māhātmyam recitation (frame ultimately Ṛṣi ↔ listener tradition; explicit speaker not marked in this verse)
Caṇḍikā (Devī)
Caṇḍikā (Ambikā/Kātyāyanī in nearby verses)
ŚāktismDevī as supreme warriorDharma-restoration through daitya-nigrahaCosmic order

FAQs

Dharma is restored not merely by force but by the righteous power (śakti) that confronts adharma directly; even sages marvel because divine justice can appear terrifying yet is ultimately protective.

Primarily within Manvantara (the Sāvarṇika Manvantara frame) and Vaṃśānucarita/Itihāsa-style narration (exemplary sacred history of Devī’s victory).

Combat ‘in the sky’ symbolizes the struggle in the subtle realm (mind/prāṇa); the astonishment of siddhas indicates that the Divine can transcend ordinary yogic expectations when confronting entrenched negativity.