Adhyaya 87 — The Slaying of Dhumralochana and the Emergence of Kali; the Fall of Chanda and Munda (Chamunda Named)
अथ मुण्डोऽभ्यधावत्तां दृष्ट्वा चण्डं निपातितम् ।
तमप्यपातयद्भूमौ सा खड्गाभिहता रुषा ॥
atha muṇḍo 'bhyadhāvat tāṃ dṛṣṭvā caṇḍaṃ nipātitam | tam apy apātayad bhūmau sā khaḍgābhihatā ruṣā ||
پھر مُنڈ نے چنڈ کو مقتول دیکھ کر دیوی پر جھپٹا۔ دیوی نے بھی غضب میں تلوار سے وار کیا اور اسے زمین پر گرا دیا۔
Adharma often escalates after witnessing consequences (Muṇḍa rushes in), but the divine response is proportionate and decisive: wrath here functions as protective force, not personal vendetta.
Carita: the defeat of demonic leaders in a dharma-restoring episode.
After the ‘Caṇḍa’ principle (violent fury) falls, the ‘Muṇḍa’ principle (headlessness—mindless momentum) still charges forward. The sword of discernment cuts down even residual compulsion.