शुक्रनिग्रहः — The Seizure/Neutralization of Śukra (Kāvya) and the Daityas’ Despondency
अद्यैतान् विवशान् हत्वा सहदेवैस्सवासवैः । भार्गवं मोचयिष्यामि जीवं योगीव कर्मतः
adyaitān vivaśān hatvā sahadevaissavāsavaiḥ | bhārgavaṃ mocayiṣyāmi jīvaṃ yogīva karmataḥ
今日、これら無力なる者どもを諸天とインドラと共に討ち果たし、我はバールガヴァを解き放ち命を甦らせん。あたかも瑜伽行者が業を自在にして、身を帯びた魂を業の縛りより放つがごとく。
A leader among the combatants in the Yuddhakhaṇḍa narrative (as narrated by Sūta Gosvāmin)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Role: liberating
The verse uses a battle-event as an inner metaphor: true “release” is the jīva being freed from karmic bondage. From a Shaiva Siddhanta lens, liberation is not mere survival but the loosening of pāśa (bondage) through higher mastery and ultimately divine grace.
Saguna Shiva as the compassionate Lord is revered as the remover of bondage—He is Pati who can loosen pāśa. Linga-worship trains the mind toward that liberating reality, so the narrative’s “freeing from karma” aligns with approaching Shiva as the bestower of anugraha (saving grace).
A practical takeaway is karma-yoga and Shiva-centered japa: offer actions to Shiva and repeat the Panchakshara (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) while contemplating release from karmic impressions; optionally support it with Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) and Rudrākṣa as Shaiva reminders of detachment and devotion.