Muñjavān on Himavat: Maheśvara’s abode, Śiva-stuti, and sacrificial gold
Chapter 8
क्रोधनायानृशंसाय मृदवे बाहुशालिने । दण्डिने तप्ततपसे तथैवाक्रूरकर्मणे
krodhanāyānṛśaṃsāya mṛdave bāhuśāline | daṇḍine taptatapase tathaivākrūrakarmaṇe ||
Saṃvarta berkata: “(Penghormatan ini) bagi Dia yang berwatak murka dan keras, namun juga lembut dan berlengan perkasa; bagi Dia yang memegang daṇḍa (tongkat hukuman), yang menempuh tapa yang membara, dan yang perbuatannya tidak kejam.”
संवर्त उवाच
Power and discipline (daṇḍa), even when associated with anger or severity, are ethically justified only when restrained by tapas and directed away from cruelty—so that governance becomes protection and order rather than violence.
Saṃvarta is describing (or invoking) a person characterized by a complex blend of traits—wrathful/harsh yet gentle, strong, punitive, and ascetically disciplined—highlighting the tension between force and compassion that underlies righteous authority.