Shukra’s Saṃjīvanī, Shiva’s Containment of the Asuras, and Indra’s Recovery of Power
विजडयाद्या महागुल्मे संप्रयाता लयं मुने नष्टायामाथ पार्वत्यां भूयो हैरण्यलोचनिः
vijaḍayādyā mahāgulme saṃprayātā layaṃ mune naṣṭāyāmātha pārvatyāṃ bhūyo hairaṇyalocaniḥ
Kemudian, wahai resi, (ia/wujud itu) melebur ke dalam lenyap di sebuah belukar besar. Dan ketika Pārvatī menghilang, Hiraṇyalocana kembali (tampak/bertindak).
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Hiraṇyalocana (‘golden-eyed’) is presented as an antagonistic figure reappearing after Pārvatī’s disappearance. In Andhaka-cycle tellings, such named beings often function as demonic agents, scouts, or companions connected to the broader asura host.
In Purāṇic narrative diction, laya commonly indicates ‘vanishing/withdrawal/absorption’ rather than literal death. Here it aligns with concealment: the goddess (or her assumed locus) disappears into a thicket, intensifying the chase-and-hide motif.
As transmitted here it is difficult: it may reflect a scribal corruption or a sandhi/compound needing emendation. A critical edition or parallel recension would be needed to decide whether it is an epithet of Gaurī, of the thicket, or a verb-form describing the action.