शुक्रनिग्रहः — The Seizure/Neutralization of Śukra (Kāvya) and the Daityas’ Despondency
धैर्यं वीर्यं गतिः कीर्तिस्सत्त्वं तेजः पराक्रमः । युगपन्नो हृतं सर्वमेकस्मिन् भार्गवे हृते
dhairyaṃ vīryaṃ gatiḥ kīrtissattvaṃ tejaḥ parākramaḥ | yugapanno hṛtaṃ sarvamekasmin bhārgave hṛte
धैर्यं वीर्यं गतिः कीर्तिः सत्त्वं तेजः पराक्रमः। युगपन्नो हृतं सर्वम् एकस्मिन् भार्गवे हृते॥
Suta Goswami (narrating the battle account to the sages at Naimisharanya)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Rudra
It highlights how worldly confidence—courage, fame, and power—can collapse instantly when one relies on a single support; Shaiva Siddhanta emphasizes anchoring strength in devotion to Pati (Shiva), not in transient heroes or circumstances.
The verse contrasts unstable, person-dependent strength with the steady refuge of Saguna Shiva worship (Linga as the accessible form of Pati), reminding devotees that true protection and tejas are upheld by Shiva’s grace rather than mere martial prowess.
A practical takeaway is to stabilize the mind with japa of the Panchākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) and cultivate sattva through Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) and disciplined prayer, so courage and clarity remain firm even amid loss.