यः क्षीराब्धेर्मंदराघातजातो ज्वालामाली कालकूटोति भीमः । तं सोढुं वा को परोऽभून्महेशाद्यत्कीलाभिः कृष्णतामाप विष्णुः
yaḥ kṣīrābdhermaṃdarāghātajāto jvālāmālī kālakūṭoti bhīmaḥ | taṃ soḍhuṃ vā ko paro'bhūnmaheśādyatkīlābhiḥ kṛṣṇatāmāpa viṣṇuḥ
El terrible veneno Kālakūṭa—ceñido de llamas—surgió del Océano de Leche cuando el monte Mandara lo golpeó. ¿Quién, fuera de Maheśa, podría soportarlo? Tan ardiente era que, por sus púas abrasadoras, aun Viṣṇu se tornó oscuro.
Satyavatī’s son (Vyāsa) continuing the stotra to Maheśa (deduced from immediate context)
Scene: The flaming Kālakūṭa rises from the Milk-Ocean during the churning; Śiva alone bears it, while even Viṣṇu is darkened by its scorching prongs.
Śiva’s compassion is shown as cosmic self-sacrifice—bearing the world’s poison so others may live and flourish.
Kāśī indirectly—this stotra to Viśvanātha in Kāśī magnifies Śiva’s universal saving power.
None; the verse is mythic-theological praise (stotra) rather than a ritual injunction.