Skanda’s Svastyayana and the Slaying of Taraka and Mahisha
तमापतन्तं महिषं सुचक्राक्षो निरीक्ष्य हि चक्रमुद्यम्य संक्रुद्धो रुरोध दनुनन्दनम्
tamāpatantaṃ mahiṣaṃ sucakrākṣo nirīkṣya hi cakramudyamya saṃkruddho rurodha danunandanam
Al ver a Mahiṣa abalanzarse, Sucakrākṣa, el de la espléndida mirada de disco, alzó con ira su cakra y detuvo al hijo de Danu.
{ "primaryRasa": "raudra", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The epithet literally means ‘one whose eye is a splendid discus’ and, together with the explicit raising of the cakra, strongly points to a Viṣṇu-identified figure or a Viṣṇu-aligned manifestation within the battle narrative. Precise identification (Viṣṇu himself vs. a named ally) depends on surrounding verses not provided here.
Many Purāṇas portray coordinated divine action: Śiva’s hosts (gaṇas, Mātṛs, Skanda) and Viṣṇu’s power can converge against Asuras. This supports a theological theme of functional unity among deities when cosmic order (dharma) is threatened.
Rurodha primarily means ‘stopped/blocked/checked.’ The verse emphasizes halting the Asura’s charge at this moment; whether it leads to wounding or death is typically narrated in subsequent lines.