The Manifestation of Katyayani (Durga) and the Humbling of the Vindhya by Agastya
हारं च सोमः सह चामरेण मालं समुद्रो हिमवान् मृगेन्द्रम् चूडामणिं कुण्डलमर्द्धचन्द्रं प्रादात् कुठारं वसुशिल्पकर्त्ता
hāraṃ ca somaḥ saha cāmareṇa mālaṃ samudro himavān mṛgendram cūḍāmaṇiṃ kuṇḍalamarddhacandraṃ prādāt kuṭhāraṃ vasuśilpakarttā
Soma offrit un collier avec un éventail en queue de yak ; l’Océan offrit une guirlande ; Himavān offrit un lion. D’autres donnèrent le joyau de la huppe, une boucle d’oreille et l’ornement du demi-croissant. Et l’artisan divin des Vasus présenta une hache.
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Cosmic order is upheld when all powers (celestial, terrestrial, and elemental—Moon, Ocean, Mountain) willingly subordinate their excellences as offerings to the supreme principle represented here by Śiva; devotion expresses itself as surrender of one’s ‘best’ (śreṣṭha-dāna).
Primarily within Vamśānucarita/Carita-style narrative material rather than cosmogenesis: it is episodic praise and gifting within a deity-centered story-world (not sarga/pratisarga).
Each gift encodes Śaiva sovereignty: ardhacandra and cūḍāmaṇi mark transcendence and auspiciousness; the lion signifies royal fearlessness; the axe (kuṭhāra) signals destruction of impediments and the cutting of ego—integrating cosmic elements into Śiva’s iconographic totality.