The Saptarishis Seek Uma for Shiva: Himavan Grants the Marriage
नीलाञ्चनचयप्रख्या नीलेन्दीवरलोचना रूपेणानुपमा काली जघन्या मेनकासुता
nīlāñcanacayaprakhyā nīlendīvaralocanā rūpeṇānupamā kālī jaghanyā menakāsutā
梅那迦(Menakā)之幼女迦梨(Kālī),色如蓝色眼药(collyrium)之聚,双目似青莲;其容貌之美,无与伦比。
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The verse foregrounds inner potential beneath outward appearance: the youngest daughter, marked by a dark (kālī) complexion, is nonetheless ‘anupamā’—incomparable—preparing the listener to value tapas and merit over superficial hierarchy (such as birth order).
This aligns most closely with Vaṃśānucarita/Carita-style narration (accounts of persons and lineages), setting up a subsequent episode involving tapas and divine encounter.
Blue-black coloration and blue-lotus eyes are conventional Purāṇic markers of auspicious, otherworldly beauty; ‘Kālī’ here functions primarily as a name/epithet of darkness, not necessarily the independent Devī Kālī theology—though the diction can evoke that resonance for later readers.