Adhyaya 85 — The Gods’ Hymn to the Goddess and the Emergence of Kaushiki; Shumbha Sends His Envoy
दूत उवाच । देवि दैत्येश्वरः शुम्भस्त्रैलोक्ये परमेश्वरः ।
दूतोऽहं प्रेषितस्तेन त्वत्सकाशमिहागतः ॥
dūta uvāca devi daityeśvaraḥ śumbhas trailokye parameśvaraḥ / dūto 'haṃ preṣitas tena tvatsakāśam ihāgataḥ
दूत म्हणाला—हे देवी, दैत्यांचा अधिपती शुम्भ त्रैलोक्यात परम शासक आहे; त्याने पाठविल्यामुळे मी तुमच्या सन्निध येथे आलो आहे।
{ "primaryRasa": "raudra", "secondaryRasa": "vira", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Adharma asserts supremacy through titles and intimidation. The Devi Mahatmyam sets up a rebuttal: ultimate sovereignty belongs to the Divine, not to those who merely dominate by force.
Narrative (ākhyāna) dialogue; not pancalakṣaṇa.
The claim ‘parameśvara’ by an asura is a classic ‘false self’ assertion—ego claiming the throne of consciousness. The Goddess represents the true ground of being that cannot be displaced by proclamation.