The Battle at Mandara: Vinayaka, Nandin, and Skanda Rout the Daitya Hosts
ततो ऽम्बरतले घोषः सस्वनः समजायत गीतवाद्यादिसंमिश्रो दुन्दुभीनां कलिप्रिय
tato 'mbaratale ghoṣaḥ sasvanaḥ samajāyata gītavādyādisaṃmiśro dundubhīnāṃ kalipriya
त्यानंतर आकाशात एक कोलाहलयुक्त नाद उत्पन्न झाला—गीत, वाद्य इत्यादींनी मिश्रित—दुंदुभींच्या निनादास प्रिय असा।
{ "primaryRasa": "raudra", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The mixture of gīta (song) and vādya (instruments) can suggest ceremonial grandeur, but the prominence of dundubhī (war-drums) and the qualifier kali-priya (fond of strife/din) tilts the sense toward martial tumult—an auditory marker of impending conflict.
In this context it functions idiomatically: ‘delighting in din/strife,’ i.e., a sound congenial to battle. It need not invoke the later-yuga concept of Kali as an era; rather it characterizes the uproar as quarrel-loving or conflict-suited.
Purāṇic battles are cosmic in scale; locating the uproar in the sky universalizes the event, implying that the confrontation reverberates through the worlds and is not merely local or terrestrial.