The Battle at Mandara: Vinayaka, Nandin, and Skanda Rout the Daitya Hosts
एकतो नैगमेयेन भिन्नः शक्त्या त्वयःसिराः शाखश्च नैगमेयश्च तूर्णमाद्रवतां रिपुम्
ekato naigameyena bhinnaḥ śaktyā tvayaḥsirāḥ śākhaśca naigameyaśca tūrṇamādravatāṃ ripum
在一侧,阿耶湿罗(Ayaḥśiras)被奈伽弥耶(Naigameya)以长矛(śakti)刺穿;随后舍迦(Śākha)与奈伽弥耶迅速冲向敌军。
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Śakti commonly denotes a spear or javelin—often a signature missile/hand-weapon in divine warfare narratives (notably in Skanda traditions), used for piercing strikes at close or mid-range.
It marks the locus of impact—suggesting a specific flank or point in the melee where Naigameya’s spear strike lands, a stylistic detail that heightens the immediacy of the battlefield scene.
Such repetition is typical of Purāṇic yuddha narration: it can indicate continued pursuit after the spear-wound, or preserve a formulaic line from a battle-catalogue tradition where actions are reiterated for emphasis and rhythmic continuity.