Shukra’s Saṃjīvanī, Shiva’s Containment of the Asuras, and Indra’s Recovery of Power
इत्वेवमुक्ते वचने बाढं सुन्दो ऽम्भयभाषत समजायत शैलादिरन्धकः शङ्करो ऽप्यभूत्
itvevamukte vacane bāḍhaṃ sundo 'mbhayabhāṣata samajāyata śailādirandhakaḥ śaṅkaro 'pyabhūt
“When these words had thus been spoken, Sundo replied, ‘So be it.’ From the mountain and the like (i.e., from rocky mass), Andhaka came into being; and Śaṅkara too manifested (in response).”
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‘Śailādi’ signals a non-womb, elemental origin—birth from mountain/rock-like substance—common in Purāṇic demonologies to mark beings as ‘earth-born’ or ‘element-born,’ emphasizing raw, untamed power.
In the Andhaka cycle, Śiva’s presence is narratively necessary because Andhaka’s rise provokes Śiva’s intervention. The phrase indicates Śiva’s responsive theophany—he ‘becomes present’ in the story-world as events ripen toward conflict.
The name aligns with that well-known asura pair, and Purāṇas often reuse or interlink asura lineages. Without the surrounding verses, the safest reading is that this is the asura Sundo within a connected demon-genealogy tradition.