Kārttikeya-Abhiṣecana: Mātṛgaṇa-Nāma Saṃkīrtana and Skanda’s Commission
वक्त्रैर्ननाविधैयें तु शूणु ताउज्जनमेजय । कूर्मकुक्कुटवकत्रा श्नव शशोलूकमुखास्तथा
vaktrair nānāvidhaiḥ ye tu śṛṇu tān ujjana-mejaya | kūrma-kukkuṭa-vaktrāḥ śvāna-śaśolūka-mukhās tathā ||
ヴァイシャンパーヤナは言った。「ジャナメージャヤよ、さまざまな顔をもつ者どもについて聞け。ある者は亀の顔、鶏の顔をもち、またある者は犬・兎・梟の口を備えていた。」
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse underscores the Mahābhārata’s use of extraordinary and unsettling imagery to convey the moral and psychological atmosphere of war—where disorder, fear, and ominous signs accompany adharma and impending destruction.
Vaiśampāyana continues describing strange beings with various animal-like faces, addressing King Janamejaya directly, as part of a larger account of ominous or terrifying phenomena connected with the events of the war.