Skanda’s Svastyayana and the Slaying of Taraka and Mahisha
तस्मिन्हते ऽथ तनये बलवान् सुनाभो वेगेन भूमिधरपार्थिवस्तथागात् ब्रह्मेन्द्ररुद्रश्विवसुप्रधाना जग्मुर्दिवं महिषमीक्ष्य हतं गुहेन // वम्प्_32.110 स्वमातुलं बीक्ष्य बली कुमारः शक्तिं समुत्पाट्य निहन्तुकामः निवारितश्चक्रधरेण वेगादालिङ्ग्य दोर्भ्या गुरुरित्युदीर्य
tasminhate 'tha tanaye balavān sunābho vegena bhūmidharapārthivastathāgāt brahmendrarudraśvivasupradhānā jagmurdivaṃ mahiṣamīkṣya hataṃ guhena // VamP_32.110 svamātulaṃ bīkṣya balī kumāraḥ śaktiṃ samutpāṭya nihantukāmaḥ nivāritaścakradhareṇa vegādāliṅgya dorbhyā gururityudīrya
那时,当那个儿子被杀后,强大的苏纳巴(Sunābha)迅速赶来。看到水牛被古哈所杀,梵天、因陀罗和鲁罗众神便返回了天堂。年轻的巴利(Bali/库玛拉)看到他的舅舅,拔出长矛想要杀他;但持轮者(毗湿奴)迅速制止了他,拥抱他说:“他是你的老师。”
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The verse frames the restraint as dharma-based: the uncle is identified as ‘guru’ (teacher/preceptor). Even in a battle context, harming one’s guru is a grave transgression; Viṣṇu embodies the regulating principle that curbs adharmic impulse.
Buffalo-slaying imagery commonly signals the defeat of a fierce, tamasic or asuric force (cf. Mahīṣa motifs). Here it marks Skanda’s martial leadership within the deva host and escalates the conflict, prompting further arrivals (Sunābha) and reactions.
They represent major deva constituencies. Listing them functions like a ‘battle-roll’ that universalizes the event: the conflict is not local but cosmic, drawing in principal divine orders who then ‘go to heaven’ after witnessing the decisive kill.