HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 45Shloka 34

Shloka 34

Indra's Campaign on Mount MalayaBirth of the Maruts

तेनैव गर्भं दितिजं वज्रेण शतपर्वणा चिच्छेद सप्तधा ब्रह्मन् स रुरोद च विस्वरम्

tenaiva garbhaṃ ditijaṃ vajreṇa śataparvaṇā ciccheda saptadhā brahman sa ruroda ca visvaram

“With that very hundred-jointed thunderbolt, he cut the Diti-born embryo into seven parts, O Brahman; and it cried aloud, wailing.”

Narrator addressing a sage (‘brahman’)continuing the account of Indra/Śakra’s act.
Indra (Śakra)Diti (asura-mother, mentioned as progenitrix)
Deva–Asura antagonismPrenatal violence and mythic multiplicationPower of the vajraPortentous crying as omen

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

FAQs

Numbers like seven often signal cosmic patterning (seven worlds, seven rivers, etc.). In such myths, division can foreshadow the emergence of multiple beings or forces from a single source, intensifying the Deva–Asura narrative stakes.

Yes. Loud, extraordinary crying functions as an omen and a narrative trigger: it alerts other figures, marks the act as consequential, and often leads to a revelation or intervention in the next verses.

The Andhaka cycle frequently intertwines daitya origins, boons, and conflicts with Devas and Rudra’s sphere. This prenatal episode supplies etiological background for later daitya power and the chain of events culminating in major confrontations.