Cyavana’s Yogic Display and Kuśika’s Recognition of Tapas (च्यवन-योगप्रभावः कुशिकस्य तपःप्रशंसा च)
हन्याद्धि भगवान् क्रुद्धस्त्रलोक्यमपि केवलम् | किं पुनर्मा तपोहीनं बाहुवीर्यपरायणम्
hanyāddhi bhagavān kruddhas trailokyam api kevalam | kiṁ punar mā tapohīnaṁ bāhuvīryaparāyaṇam ||
For if the Blessed Lord, when angered, could destroy even the three worlds outright, how much more easily could he strike down me—bereft of ascetic power and relying only on the strength of my arms?
नहुष उवाच
The verse contrasts divine, dharma-backed power with mere bodily strength: without tapas (spiritual discipline/merit) and humility, reliance on arm-strength is fragile, and one should not presume safety before a higher moral-cosmic authority.
Nahusha speaks in a self-abasing, cautionary tone, acknowledging that if the Lord’s wrath can annihilate even the three worlds, then Nahusha—lacking ascetic power and depending only on physical prowess—would be even more vulnerable.