Skanda’s Svastyayana and the Slaying of Taraka and Mahisha
तमापतन्तं महिषं सुचक्राक्षो निरीक्ष्य हि चक्रमुद्यम्य संक्रुद्धो रुरोध दनुनन्दनम्
tamāpatantaṃ mahiṣaṃ sucakrākṣo nirīkṣya hi cakramudyamya saṃkruddho rurodha danunandanam
దూసుకొస్తున్న మహిషుణ్ని చూసిన సుచక్రాక్షుడు కోపంతో చక్రాన్ని ఎత్తి దనునందనుని అడ్డగించాడు।
{ "primaryRasa": "raudra", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The epithet literally means ‘one whose eye is a splendid discus’ and, together with the explicit raising of the cakra, strongly points to a Viṣṇu-identified figure or a Viṣṇu-aligned manifestation within the battle narrative. Precise identification (Viṣṇu himself vs. a named ally) depends on surrounding verses not provided here.
Many Purāṇas portray coordinated divine action: Śiva’s hosts (gaṇas, Mātṛs, Skanda) and Viṣṇu’s power can converge against Asuras. This supports a theological theme of functional unity among deities when cosmic order (dharma) is threatened.
Rurodha primarily means ‘stopped/blocked/checked.’ The verse emphasizes halting the Asura’s charge at this moment; whether it leads to wounding or death is typically narrated in subsequent lines.