शरभप्रादुर्भावो नाम षण्णवतितमोऽध्यायः (जलन्धरविमर्दनम्)
कुलिशेन यथा छिन्नो द्विधा गिरिवरो द्विजाः पपात दैत्यो बलवान् अञ्जनाद्रिरिवापरः
kuliśena yathā chinno dvidhā girivaro dvijāḥ papāta daityo balavān añjanādririvāparaḥ
ໂອ ທ່ານດວິຊະທັງຫຼາຍ, ເຫມືອນພູໃຫຍ່ຖືກວັດຊະຣະ (vajra) ຟັນຂາດເປັນສອງ ແລ້ວລົ້ມລົງ, ດາຍຕະຜູ້ມີພະລັງນັ້ນກໍລົ້ມພັງເຊັ່ນດຽວກັນ—ດັ່ງອັນຈະນາດຣິອີກລູກໜຶ່ງຖືກທໍາລາຍ.
Suta Goswami
It reinforces the Purāṇic theme that the Lord (Pati) safeguards cosmic order by bringing down adharma; in Linga worship, this is remembered as Shiva’s stabilizing grace that subdues asuric forces obstructing devotion and right ritual.
Though Shiva is not named directly here, the narrative function aligns with Shiva-tattva as Pati: the supreme regulator whose power manifests in the defeat of destructive, egoic forces—symbolically ‘cleaving’ ignorance so the pashu may move toward liberation.
The verse chiefly highlights inner conquest: in Pāśupata-oriented reading, the ‘fall of the Daitya’ mirrors the yogin’s subduing of tamas-rajas (pāśa/bondage) through disciplined worship, mantra, and steadfast dharma.