श्रद्धां विहाय परमां शिवपूजकानां निंदापरः स हि बभूव नराधमश्च । सर्वैर्महर्षिभिरुपेत्य स तत्र शर्वं देवं निनिन्द न बभूव कदापि शान्तः
śraddhāṃ vihāya paramāṃ śivapūjakānāṃ niṃdāparaḥ sa hi babhūva narādhamaśca | sarvairmaharṣibhirupetya sa tatra śarvaṃ devaṃ nininda na babhūva kadāpi śāntaḥ
اعلیٰ ترین عقیدت کو چھوڑ کر وہ شِو کے بھکتوں کی بدگوئی میں لگ گیا اور یوں بدترین انسان بن بیٹھا۔ سب مہارِشیوں کے ساتھ وہاں پہنچ کر اس نے شَروَ دیو (شِو) کی بھی نِندا کی؛ اور وہ کبھی بھی سکون نہ پا سکا۔
Narrative voice (deduced: Lomaharṣaṇa/Sūta in Māheśvarakhaṇḍa context)
Scene: Dakṣa, surrounded by great sages, points in disdain while speaking harshly against Śiva; nearby, Śiva’s devotees appear pained; the scene is charged with moral tension and lack of peace.
Disrespect toward Śiva and especially the censure of His devotees destroys inner peace and is portrayed as a grave dharmic downfall.
The verse sits within the Kedārakhaṇḍa setting, oriented toward Kedāra/Kedārakṣetra’s Śaiva sacred landscape, though this specific line stresses conduct rather than a site-description.
No explicit ritual is prescribed here; the emphasis is ethical—maintaining śraddhā (reverence) and avoiding nindā (revilement) of Śiva and His devotees.