The Battle at Mandara: Vinayaka, Nandin, and Skanda Rout the Daitya Hosts
ततो ऽम्बरतले घोषः सस्वनः समजायत गीतवाद्यादिसंमिश्रो दुन्दुभीनां कलिप्रिय
tato 'mbaratale ghoṣaḥ sasvanaḥ samajāyata gītavādyādisaṃmiśro dundubhīnāṃ kalipriya
随后,天际间响起喧腾之声——回荡不绝,夹杂歌咏、乐器等诸般音响——此等喧闹,正合于战鼓(dundubhi)擂击之所喜。
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The mixture of gīta (song) and vādya (instruments) can suggest ceremonial grandeur, but the prominence of dundubhī (war-drums) and the qualifier kali-priya (fond of strife/din) tilts the sense toward martial tumult—an auditory marker of impending conflict.
In this context it functions idiomatically: ‘delighting in din/strife,’ i.e., a sound congenial to battle. It need not invoke the later-yuga concept of Kali as an era; rather it characterizes the uproar as quarrel-loving or conflict-suited.
Purāṇic battles are cosmic in scale; locating the uproar in the sky universalizes the event, implying that the confrontation reverberates through the worlds and is not merely local or terrestrial.