Atithi-satkāra and the Consolation of Wise Counsel (अतिथिसत्कारः प्रज्ञानवचनस्य च पराश्वासनम्)
अथ रुद्र उपाधावत् तावृषी तपसान्वितौ । तत एन॑ समुद्भूतं कण्ठे जग्राह पाणिना
atha rudra upādhāvat tāv ṛṣī tapasānvitau | tata enaṃ samudbhūtaṃ kaṇṭhe jagrāha pāṇinā ||
そのときルドラは、苦行力(タパス)を具えた二人のリシへと突進した。まさにその瞬間、かの者が立ち上がるや、ルドラは手でその喉を掴んだ—これは、タパスとダルマにより支えられる秩序を脅かす攪乱や驕慢の力を、霊的権威と神の護りが抑え込むことを示す。
तामिन्द्र उवाच गच्छ नहुषस्त्वया वाच्योथ<पूर्वेण मामृषियुक्तेन यानेन त्वमधिरूढ
Tapas and dharma are not merely personal virtues; they are protective forces in the moral cosmos. When disruptive power arises against those grounded in ascetic discipline, divine authority (here Rudra) intervenes to restrain it, illustrating that spiritual merit and righteous order are safeguarded.
Rudra quickly approaches two ascetic sages. As an entity (or adversarial force) emerges, Rudra physically restrains him by gripping his throat, signaling immediate containment of a threat directed toward the sages or the order they represent.