इत्युक्ता गिरिजा तेन मुक्तकण्ठा पिनाकिना उवाच कोपरक्ताक्षी भ्रुकुटीकुटिलानना //
ityuktā girijā tena muktakaṇṭhā pinākinā uvāca koparaktākṣī bhrukuṭīkuṭilānanā //
Ainsi apostrophée par lui—Pinākin (Śiva), porteur de l’arc Pināka—Girijā (Pārvatī), la gorge sans retenue, parla, les yeux rougis de colère et le visage contracté par un sourcil froncé.
This verse does not discuss pralaya; it is a narrative transition describing Pārvatī’s emotional reaction before she replies to Śiva.
Directly, it does not prescribe rājadharma or gṛhastha-dharma; indirectly, it highlights the ethical weight of speech and restraint in dialogue—an ideal often extended to household and royal conduct in Purāṇic teaching.
No vastu, temple-building, iconographic measurements, or ritual procedure is stated here; the verse functions as a character-and-scene marker within a Śaiva narrative.