धृतशार्ङ्गधनुर्दंडं दंडिताखिलदानवम् । मधुकैटभहंतारं कंसविध्वंससूचकम्
dhṛtaśārṅgadhanurdaṃḍaṃ daṃḍitākhiladānavam | madhukaiṭabhahaṃtāraṃ kaṃsavidhvaṃsasūcakam
Portaba el poder, cual bastón, del arco Śārṅga, castigando a todos los demonios; el matador de Madhu y Kaiṭabha, la misma señal y heraldo de la destrucción de Kaṃsa.
Skanda (deduced, Kāśīkhaṇḍa context)
Scene: The Lord stands poised with the Śārṅga bow like a staff of authority; demons recoil. Iconic flashes of Madhu-Kaiṭabha’s defeat and the foretelling of Kaṃsa’s destruction appear as narrative vignettes around Him.
The Lord safeguards dharma by restraining and destroying adharma—divine power is portrayed as protective justice (daṇḍa).
No specific tīrtha is named in this verse; it continues the devotional description within the Kāśī section’s narrative.
None; the verse is theological and narrative, emphasizing divine protection rather than ritual acts.