HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 32Shloka 48
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Vamana Purana — Skanda Slays Taraka & Mahisha, Shloka 48

Skanda’s Svastyayana and the Slaying of Taraka and Mahisha

यत्र ते दारुमाकारा गणाश्चक्रुर्महास्वनम् तत्र दैत्याः समाजग्मुः सायुधाः सबला मुने

yatra te dārumākārā gaṇāścakrurmahāsvanam tatra daityāḥ samājagmuḥ sāyudhāḥ sabalā mune

その軍勢が樹木のごとき姿をなし、大いなる轟音を起こしたところへ、賢者よ、ダイティヤらは武器を携え軍勢を伴って集結した。

Narrator addressing a sage (‘mune’)—exact interlocutors not specified in the excerpt.
Ominous portents and battle-noiseMustering of Daitya armiesMartial imagery (tree-like hosts)

{ "primaryRasa": "raudra", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

It is a vivid simile: the massed ranks appear like a forest—tall, dense, and immovable—often implying both sheer numbers and a terrifying, shadowy presence.

Purāṇic battle narration uses sound as a marker of scale and impending violence; the roar signals the convergence of armies and functions like a narrative ‘drumbeat’ before combat.

Not necessarily. ‘Gaṇa’ can mean any ‘host/troop.’ Since no Śaiva markers (Śiva, Nandī, Pramatha, etc.) appear in the verse, it is safest to read it as generic military hosts rather than Śiva’s attendant-gaṇas.