क्षुपस्य विष्णुदर्शनं, वैष्णवस्तोत्रं, दधीचविवादः, स्थानेश्वरतीर्थमाहात्म्यं
तस्मात्समेत्य विप्रेन्द्रं सर्वयत्नेन भूपते करोमि यत्नं राजेन्द्र दधीचविजयाय ते
tasmātsametya viprendraṃ sarvayatnena bhūpate karomi yatnaṃ rājendra dadhīcavijayāya te
因此,大地之主啊,我将竭尽一切努力前往拜见那位最尊胜的婆罗门;并且,诸王之王啊,我将为你的胜利而奋力,以达提奇(Dadhīci)的威力与护持为助,使你的愿望依于法(Dharma)并契合主宰帕提(Pati,湿婆)之旨而成就。
Suta (narrating an internal courtly dialogue; the immediate speaker is a minister/ally addressing a king)
It highlights that worldly victory is not merely political but dharmic—secured by approaching a tapasvin (like Dadhīci) whose spiritual power ultimately aligns the king’s action with Pati (Shiva) and sacred order.
Implicitly, it points to Pati as the unseen governor of outcomes: even a king (pashu, bound by pasha like ambition and fear) succeeds when action is redirected through dharma and the sanctifying force of realized sages—who function as conduits of Shiva’s ordinance.
The verse foregrounds reliance on brahminical tapas and dharmic counsel—an applied form of spiritual discipline rather than a specific puja-vidhi, where ascetic power and right intention become the means to remove obstacles to righteous victory.