वंशानुवर्णनम् — सात्वतवंशः, स्यमन्तक-प्रसङ्गः, कृष्णावतारः, शिवप्रसादः (पाशुपतयोगः)
अथ दैत्यवधं चक्रे हलायुधसहायवान् तथा दुष्टक्षितीशानां लीलयैव रणाजिरे
atha daityavadhaṃ cakre halāyudhasahāyavān tathā duṣṭakṣitīśānāṃ līlayaiva raṇājire
Alors, aidé par Halāyudha (Balarāma), il accomplit l’abattement des Dāitya ; et sur le champ de bataille il soumit pareillement les rois iniques de la terre—comme un simple līlā divin, sans peine et sans obstacle.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames the Lord’s protection of dharma as līlā—reminding the devotee that worship of the Linga invokes Pati (Shiva) who effortlessly removes outer and inner forces of adharma that bind the pashu (soul).
By emphasizing effortless victory “as play,” it points to the Lord’s sovereignty and freedom (svātantrya): the supreme Pati is not compelled by karma or struggle, yet acts compassionately to dissolve pāśas and restore order.
The verse implies a Pāśupata-oriented takeaway: treat enemies as manifestations of pāśa (bondage) and cultivate steadfast worship (lingārcana) with disciplined restraint, seeking Shiva’s anugraha (grace) for the subjugation of inner daityas like anger and pride.