कुम्भकर्णदर्शनम्
The Appearance of Kumbhakarna and the Account of His Might
शूलपाणिंविरूपाक्षंकुम्भकर्णंमहाबलम् ।हन्तुं न शेकुस्त्रिदशाःकालोऽयमितिमोहिताः ।।6.61.11।।
śūlapāṇiṃ virūpākṣaṃ kumbhakarṇaṃ mahābalam |
hantuṃ na śekuḥ tridaśāḥ kālo ’yam iti mohitāḥ ||6.61.11||
Kumbhakarṇa—tenant le trident, aux yeux terribles et d’une force immense—ne put être tué même par les dieux, car, égarés, ils pensaient : «C’est la Mort elle-même».
"Kumbhakarna is by nature (by birth) energetic and mighty. The strength of other Rakshasas is on account of their boons received by them."
Fear and भ्रम (delusion) can paralyze even the powerful; Dharma calls for steadiness and truth-seeing—recognizing threats accurately rather than mythologizing them into invincibility.
Kumbhakarṇa is portrayed as so terrifying and strong that even the gods fail to kill him, mistaking him for Kāla incarnate.
The implied virtue is धैर्य (courage/fortitude) grounded in सत्य (truthful perception), contrasting with the Devas’ momentary bewilderment.