Sukeshi’s Inquiry into Dharma: The Seven Dvipas and the Twenty-One Hells
आजघान तलेनेभं कुम्भमध्ये पदा करे जानुना च समाहत्य विषाणं प्रबभञ्ज च / 10.10 वाममुष्ट्या तथा पार्श्वं समाहत्यान्धकस्त्वरन् गजेन्द्रं पातयामास प्रहारैर्जर्जरीकृतम्
ājaghāna talenebhaṃ kumbhamadhye padā kare jānunā ca samāhatya viṣāṇaṃ prababhañja ca / 10.10 vāmamuṣṭyā tathā pārśvaṃ samāhatyāndhakastvaran gajendraṃ pātayāmāsa prahārairjarjarīkṛtam
അന്ധകൻ ഗജേന്ദ്രന്റെ കുംഭസ്ഥലത്തിന്റെ മദ്ധ്യത്തിൽ കൈത്തളിരാൽ അടിച്ചു; കാൽ, കൈ, മുട്ട് എന്നിവകൊണ്ടും പ്രഹരിച്ചു, ദന്തം പൊട്ടിച്ചു. പിന്നെ ഇടത് മുഷ്ടിയാൽ പാർശ്വത്തിൽ അടിച്ച്, അനേകം പ്രഹാരങ്ങളാൽ ജർജരിതനായ ഗജരാജനെ നിലത്തേക്ക് വീഴ്ത്തി।
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Purāṇic battle scenes often stress that adharma can display terrifying effectiveness (even against symbols of royal/divine power like the elephant-king), but such force is narratively framed as ultimately self-defeating when set against cosmic order.
Vamśānucarita / narrative episode (deva–daitya struggle) rather than cosmogenesis; it contributes to the Purāṇic historical-mythic account of conflicts among exalted beings.
The elephant-king functions as a sign of sovereignty and stable rule (aiśvarya). Its battering and fall dramatize a temporary eclipse of orderly kingship by chaotic power—an image that typically prepares the way for restoration through divine alignment (often via a higher deity’s intervention later in the arc).