महाबलेन रुद्रेण विधृतोपि मृतो नहि । स्तुतस्तेन तदा शंभुर्भक्त्या दैत्येन सुव्रत
mahābalena rudreṇa vidhṛtopi mṛto nahi | stutastena tadā śaṃbhurbhaktyā daityena suvrata
മഹാബലവാനായ രുദ്രൻ പിടിച്ചിട്ടും അവൻ മരിച്ചില്ല. അപ്പോൾ ആ ദൈത്യൻ ഭക്തിയോടെ ശംഭുവിനെ സ്തുതിച്ചു, ഹേ സുവ്രത।
Narrator within the Sṛṣṭikhaṇḍa dialogue (context-address: 'suvrata' = the listener being addressed; exact named speaker not explicit in this single verse).
Concept: Devotional praise can transmute fear and avert destruction; even a demon’s bhakti becomes efficacious when directed with sincerity.
Application: When overwhelmed by ‘Rudra-like’ forces (crisis, loss, inner turbulence), shift from resistance to reverent surrender—offer honest praise/prayer and align conduct with dharma.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A fierce Rudra, towering and ash-smeared, grips a trembling yet undying daitya whose eyes shift from terror to devotion. The demon folds his hands and begins a hymn; the stormy aura softens into a halo as Śambhu’s gaze turns from wrath to grace.","primary_figures":["Rudra/Śambhu","Daitya devotee","Attendant gaṇas (subtle)"],"setting":"A liminal battlefield-turned-sacred space—dark rocks, swirling dust, a sudden stillness around the figures.","lighting_mood":"divine radiance breaking through storm-gloom","color_palette":["smoky ash gray","ruddy vermilion","indigo night","golden aura","bone white"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Śambhu as Rudra in aṣṭamūrti symbolism, holding the daitya yet blessing him; heavy gold leaf halo, ornate crown and rudrākṣa details, rich maroon backdrop, gem-studded borders, stylized gaṇas at the margins, lotus motifs framing the sudden turn from wrath to grace.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: a dramatic cliffside with swirling clouds; Rudra’s fierce form rendered with delicate lines, the daitya in humble añjali; cool blues and grays with a soft golden break in the sky, refined faces, lyrical naturalism, sparse trees bending in wind.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines, Rudra with wide expressive eyes and ash-toned body, the daitya kneeling; red-yellow-green palette with a luminous golden nimbus, temple-wall composition, rhythmic patterns suggesting storm energy dissolving into calm.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central Śambhu with lotus-foot emphasis, the daitya offering stuti; intricate floral borders, stylized clouds, deep indigo ground with gold highlights, lotuses and sacred motifs indicating the conversion of fear into devotion."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["low temple drum","distant thunder","conch shell (soft)","sudden silence at the moment of praise"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: विधृतोपि = विधृतः + अपि; शंभुर्भक्त्या = शम्भुः + भक्त्या (विसर्ग→र्)
It shows that even a Daitya turns to sincere praise (stuti) with devotion (bhakti), implying devotion is accessible to all beings regardless of origin.
Śiva (Rudra/Śambhu) is depicted as supremely powerful—able to seize an opponent—yet the narrative pivots to devotion and praise, highlighting his responsiveness to bhakti.
In crisis, turning toward sincere reverence and inner transformation is presented as a higher response than hostility, suggesting devotion and humility can change one’s fate.