गृध्रो वै कुंजरस्यासीन्मेषस्याभूच्च राक्षसः । कालनेमेर्महाकालो निमेरासीन्महातिमिः
gṛdhro vai kuṃjarasyāsīnmeṣasyābhūcca rākṣasaḥ | kālanemermahākālo nimerāsīnmahātimiḥ
Para kay Kuñjara, ang sagisag ay isang buwitre; para kay Meṣa, isang rākṣasa. Para kay Kālanemi, si Mahākāla; at para kay Nimi, ang dakilang dilim (mahātimi).
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta), narrating to the sages
Scene: Four standards rise: Kuñjara’s bears a vulture; Meṣa’s a fierce rākṣasa figure; Kālanemi’s shows Mahākāla—dark, time-death personified; Nimi’s is an expanse of thick darkness like a black pennant swallowing light.
Adharma aligns itself with death, darkness, and predation—yet these are ultimately subordinate to the divine order that governs time (kāla).
None; “Mahākāla” here functions as a fearsome emblem/name, not a direct praise of Ujjain’s Mahākāleśvara tīrtha in this verse.
None.