Kārttikeya-Abhiṣecana: Mātṛgaṇa-Nāma Saṃkīrtana and Skanda’s Commission
कृकलासमुखाश्वैव विरजो<म्बरधारिण: । व्यालवक्त्रा: शूलमुखाश्षण्डवक्त्रा: शुभानना:
kṛkalāsamukhāś caiva virajāmbaradhāriṇaḥ | vyālavaktrāḥ śūlamukhāḥ ṣaṇḍavaktrāḥ śubhānanāḥ ||
毗舍波耶那说道:“有的面貌如蜥蜴;有的身披洁白无瑕的衣裳。有的生着蛇一般的脸,有的脸如枪矛之锋。某些面孔上,凶怒仿佛滴淌而出;而另一些面孔上,则笼罩着温和吉祥的宁静。”
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse underscores how, in times of adharma and catastrophic war, the world appears morally and psychologically distorted: beings and signs seem uncanny, reflecting inner states like rage and calm. It cautions that ethical collapse is mirrored by unsettling portents and a breakdown of ordinary order.
Vaiśampāyana describes a frightening, otherworldly scene in which various beings (or apparitions) appear with grotesque and weapon-like faces, some clothed in spotless white, some radiating fury, others seeming gentle—an ominous tableau accompanying the climactic violence of the war.
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