हिरण्यकशिपोः क्रोधः तथा देवप्रजाकदनम् — Hiraṇyakaśipu’s Wrath and the Affliction of Devas and Beings
प्रताप्य लोकानखिलांस्ततोऽसौ समागतं पद्मभवं ददर्श । वरं हि दातुं तमुवाच धाता वरं वृणीष्वेति पितामहोपि । निशम्य वाचं मधुरां विधातुर्वचोऽब्रवीदेव ममूढबुद्धिः
pratāpya lokānakhilāṃstato'sau samāgataṃ padmabhavaṃ dadarśa | varaṃ hi dātuṃ tamuvāca dhātā varaṃ vṛṇīṣveti pitāmahopi | niśamya vācaṃ madhurāṃ vidhāturvaco'bravīdeva mamūḍhabuddhiḥ
Matapos supilin ang lahat ng mga daigdig sa pamamagitan ng kanyang kapangyarihan, nakita niya ang pagdating ni Padmabhava (Brahmā). Nais magbigay ng biyaya ang Manlilikha—si Pitāmaha mismo—kaya sinabi niya, “Pumili ka ng biyaya.” Nang marinig ang matatamis na salita ng Tagapag-ayos (Brahmā), ang taong yaong naliligaw ang isip ay sumagot.
Sūta Gosvāmin (narrating to the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Rudra
Sthala Purana: Boons granted by Brahmā to asuras are a recurring Purāṇic device; here it sets up later conflict and the necessity of Śiva’s restoring action.
Significance: Instructional: worldly ‘vara’ obtained through tapas can intensify bondage (pāśa) when driven by delusion; true safety lies in Śiva’s anugraha, not in boon-politics.
Cosmic Event: Asura’s prowess ‘subdues’ worlds; Brahmā’s arrival to regulate through boon-granting—prelude to imbalance.
It highlights that even after conquering worlds, the mind can remain moha-bound (deluded). In Shaiva understanding, true victory is not dominion but purification leading to Shiva’s grace and liberation.
The verse contrasts worldly conquest with the need for right orientation. Linga/Saguna Shiva worship trains the devotee to seek Shiva’s anugraha (grace) rather than boons that intensify ego—turning power into devotion and surrender.
Choose boons inwardly: practice japa of the Pañcākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) with vibhūti (tripuṇḍra) and a prayer for buddhi-śuddhi (clarity of intellect), not for domination or revenge.