Skanda’s Svastyayana and the Slaying of Taraka and Mahisha
अन्ये चोचुर्वयं नूनं निघ्नामो महिषासुरम् तारकं घातयामो ऽद्य वदन्त्यन्ये सुतैजसः
anye cocurvayaṃ nūnaṃ nighnāmo mahiṣāsuram tārakaṃ ghātayāmo 'dya vadantyanye sutaijasaḥ
D’autres dirent : « Assurément, nous allons maintenant abattre Mahiṣāsura ». Et d’autres encore—rayonnants de leur propre énergie ardente—dirent : « Aujourd’hui, nous tuerons Tāraka ».
{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "raudra", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The names match well-known Asura figures across Purāṇic literature (e.g., Mahiṣa as the buffalo-demon; Tāraka as a powerful Asura). However, individual Purāṇas may reframe their roles, chronology, or opponents; confirmation requires the immediate narrative context of Vāmana Purāṇa Adhyāya 32.
Tejas is both spiritual and martial potency. Calling warriors ‘sutaijasaḥ’ portrays them as empowered by inherent brilliance—suggesting divine/ascetic force, heroic charisma, or supernatural vigor rather than mere physical strength.
It depicts a large coalition with distributed aims, heightening the scale of conflict. Literarily, it also foreshadows multiple sub-encounters within the broader battle narrative (separate duels or slayings).