Adhyaya 83 — The Slaying of Mahishasura’s Armies and the Final Death of Mahishasura
ततो वेगात्खमुत्पत्य निपत्य च मृगारिणा ।
करप्रहारेण शिरश्चामरस्य पृथक्कृतम् ॥
tato vegāt kham utpatya nipatya ca mṛgāriṇā | karaprahāreṇa śiraś cāmarasya pṛthakkṛtam ||
అప్పుడు సింహము వేగంగా ఆకాశమునకు ఎగసి, క్రిందికి దూకి, తన పంజా దెబ్బతో చామరుని శిరస్సును తెగదెంపి పడగొట్టెను।
Adharma, even when backed by force and numbers, is cut down decisively when it confronts the divine order (ṛta/dharma). The lion, as the Goddess’s power in action, symbolizes fearless discernment that severs arrogance (demonic pride) at its root.
This passage belongs to the puranic upākhyāna/narrative portion rather than to sarga/pratisarga/manvantara/vaṃśa/vaṃśānucarita as a data-list. If mapped, it most closely supports dharma-protection themes commonly embedded within vaṃśānucarita-era narratives, but it is not itself a genealogical or manvantara account.
The lion’s upward leap (ascent) and downward strike (descent) can be read as śakti moving from subtle to manifest: the awakened inner power rises beyond fear and then ‘cuts’ the egoic head (ahaṅkāra) that leads the demonic host.