रुद्रस्य रणप्रवेशः तथा दैत्यगणानां बाणवृष्टिः
Rudra Enters the Battlefield; the Daityas’ Arrow-Storm
ततः क्रोधपरीतात्मा दैत्यान्धिक्कृतवान्रणे । शुंभादिकान्महादैत्यः प्रहसन्प्राह धैर्यवान्
tataḥ krodhaparītātmā daityāndhikkṛtavānraṇe | śuṃbhādikānmahādaityaḥ prahasanprāha dhairyavān
Pagkaraan, nabalot ng poot ang kanyang diwa, at ang makapangyarihang daitya ay nilait ang mga daitya sa digmaan. Pagkatawa, ang matatag na mandirigma ay nagsalita kay Śumbha at sa iba pa.
Suta Goswami (narrating the battle account to the sages of Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pashu
The verse highlights how krodha (anger) fuels arrogance and contempt in conflict; from a Śaiva Siddhānta lens, such passions are pāsas (bondages) that veil right discernment and keep the soul bound to reactive karma.
By contrast: the battle-taunt mood shows the instability of ego and anger, while Saguna Śiva worship (Liṅga-pūjā) cultivates steadiness, humility, and inner restraint—qualities that dissolve these bondages and align the devotee with Śiva’s grace.
A practical takeaway is japa of the Pañcākṣarī mantra (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) to pacify anger, along with wearing rudrākṣa and applying tripuṇḍra-bhasma as daily reminders of restraint, purity, and devotion.