Shukra’s Saṃjīvanī, Shiva’s Containment of the Asuras, and Indra’s Recovery of Power
सवाहनाः क्षयं जग्मुः कुलिशेनेव पर्वताः दृष्ट्वा ब्रह्महरी युद्धे घातयन्तौ महासुरान्
savāhanāḥ kṣayaṃ jagmuḥ kuliśeneva parvatāḥ dṛṣṭvā brahmaharī yuddhe ghātayantau mahāsurān
Together with their mounts, they went to destruction, like mountains struck by the thunderbolt—on seeing Brahmā and Hari in battle, slaying the great Asuras.
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The vajra (kuliśa) is the archetypal irresistible weapon of Indra. The simile conveys sudden, total collapse—massive beings falling as decisively as mountains shattered by the thunderbolt.
Purāṇic battle scenes sometimes depict Brahmā as participating through divine power, boons, or extraordinary agency, even if his primary role is creation and counsel. The verse highlights the combined authority of cosmic functions (creation and preservation) against adharma.
Not from this verse alone. ‘Hari’ is a general epithet of Viṣṇu; identification of a specific avatāra requires nearby narrative markers (e.g., Bali episode, three strides, dwarf form).