Dakṣa-yajña-bhaṅgaḥ — Dadhīci’s Teaching and the Destruction of Dakṣa’s Sacrifice
वीरभद्र इति ख्यातं देवदेवसमन्वितम् / स जातमात्रो देवेशमुपतस्थे कृताञ्जलिः
vīrabhadra iti khyātaṃ devadevasamanvitam / sa jātamātro deveśamupatasthe kṛtāñjaliḥ
Tornou-se conhecido como Vīrabhadra, dotado da presença e do poder do Deus dos deuses; e, no exato instante em que nasceu, aproximou-se reverente do Senhor dos devas, de pé com as mãos postas.
Purāṇic narrator (Vyāsa/Śaunaka-style narration describing the episode)
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
By portraying even a mighty, divinely empowered being as immediately bowing to the Lord, the verse implies a higher sovereign reality (Īśvara) before whom all manifested powers are secondary—pointing to the supremacy of the inner Lord beyond individual might.
The verse foregrounds the yogic ethic of humility and surrender (praṇipāta/añjali), a foundational disposition for Shaiva-Pāśupata and Purāṇic yoga: reverent approach to Īśvara as the prerequisite for discipline, mantra, and higher contemplation.
By emphasizing devotion to the supreme “Lord of the gods” while describing a Shaiva figure (Vīrabhadra), the Kurma Purana’s tone supports a harmonizing theology where ultimate lordship is honored as one reality, expressed through Shaiva and Vaishnava forms.