नारदस्य वच: श्रुत्वा क्रुद्धः प्राज्वलदड्धिरा: । अपिबत् तेजसा वारि विष्ट भ्य सुमहातपा:
nāradāsya vacaḥ śrutvā kruddhaḥ prājvalad aṅgirāḥ | apibat tejasā vāri viṣṭabhya sumahātapāḥ ||
لمّا سمع أُتَثْيَا—ابن أَنْغِيرَس—كلامَ نَارَدَةَ، اشتعل غضبًا. وذلك الناسك العظيم، معتمدًا على قوة تَقَشُّفِه، أوقف المياه وشرع يشربها بوهجِ تَيْجَسِه الروحي.
अजुन उवाच
The verse highlights the ethical tension between spiritual power (tapas/tejas) and self-control: even a great ascetic can be driven by anger to use extraordinary power in a forceful, potentially harmful way, implying that mastery over krodha is integral to dharma.
After hearing Nārada’s statement, Utathya becomes enraged; empowered by his austerities, he restrains the waters and begins to drink them up through his tejas, demonstrating the formidable potency attributed to sages in epic narrative.