The Battle at Mandara: Vinayaka, Nandin, and Skanda Rout the Daitya Hosts
दक्षिणाङ्गं नखान्तं वै समकम्पत शूलिनः शकुनिश् चापि हारीतो मौनी याति पराङ्गमुखः
dakṣiṇāṅgaṃ nakhāntaṃ vai samakampata śūlinaḥ śakuniś cāpi hārīto maunī yāti parāṅgamukhaḥ
三叉戟を執る者の右の肢は、爪先に至るまで震えた。さらに緑がかった鳥(hārīta)も、黙して進み、顔をそむけていた。
{ "primaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Aṅga-kampa (trembling of limbs) is a standard omen motif. The text records it as a meaningful sign accompanying a decisive event; its precise valence (favorable/unfavorable) is typically resolved by the narrative outcome and by the cluster of other omens described around it.
Hārīta denotes a greenish bird (and in some traditions a specific omen-bird category). Its ‘mauna’ (silence) and ‘parāṅgamukha’ (averted face) are behavioral markers used in omen-reading, suggesting an uncanny, charged environment as battle approaches.
Not directly. It is metadata-relevant primarily for nimitta taxonomy (bodily and avian signs) within the Andhaka-vadha narrative, without naming any rivers, forests, or tīrthas.