भयं च तेषां न भवेत्कदाचित्पठन्ति ये तात इदं द्विजाग्र्याः । सङ्ग्रामचौराग्निवने तथाब्धौ तेषां शिवस्त्राति न संशयोऽत्र
bhayaṃ ca teṣāṃ na bhavetkadācitpaṭhanti ye tāta idaṃ dvijāgryāḥ | saṅgrāmacaurāgnivane tathābdhau teṣāṃ śivastrāti na saṃśayo'tra
Ô bien-aimé, pour les plus éminents parmi les deux-fois-nés qui récitent ceci, la crainte ne surgit jamais. Dans la bataille, parmi les voleurs, dans le feu, dans la forêt et même dans l’océan, Śiva les protège ; il n’y a là aucun doute.
Narrator (contextual Purāṇic narration)
Tirtha: Revā (Narmadā)
Type: river
Listener: ‘tāta’ addressed to a dear interlocutor (contextual listener within Revākhaṇḍa narration)
Scene: A learned dvija recites a palm-leaf text while dangers loom—battlefield, thieves, wildfire, dense forest, and a stormy sea—yet an unseen Śiva-shield surrounds him, calming the chaos.
Regular recitation anchored in faith invokes Śiva’s protective grace across worldly dangers.
No single tirtha is named; the verse belongs to the Revā-khaṇḍa milieu and emphasizes the stotra’s protective power.
Pāṭha (recitation) of the hymn is prescribed as the means to gain protection.