Matsya Purana — War of Devas and Dānavas: Yama and Kubera Defeated; Kālanemi’s Māyā and the A...
स चापि चिन्तयामास कृते प्रतिकृतिक्रियाम् मद्विधे वस्तुनि पुंसि प्रभोः परिभवोदयात् //
sa cāpi cintayāmāsa kṛte pratikṛtikriyām madvidhe vastuni puṃsi prabhoḥ paribhavodayāt //
He too began to ponder how to carry out a counter-act of retaliation, for the insult to his master had arisen through a man of my sort—an insignificant person.
This verse is not about Pralaya; it focuses on human emotion and ethics—how humiliation gives rise to thoughts of retaliation.
It highlights a key Rajadharma concern: the impulse to retaliate after an insult. A king or householder is expected to restrain reactive vengeance and choose proportionate, dharma-aligned action rather than being driven by wounded honor.
No Vastu or ritual procedure is specified here; the verse is primarily ethical-psychological, describing the rise of retaliatory intent from perceived dishonor.