ततो लोका: पुनः प्राप्ता: सुरैः शान्तभयैर्न॒प । अथैनमन्रुवन् देवा भूमिष्ठानसुरान् जहि
tato lokāḥ punaḥ prāptāḥ suraiḥ śāntabhayair nṛpa | athainam abruvan devā bhūmiṣṭhān asurān jahi ||
毗湿摩说道:“于是,大王啊,诸天恐惧既息,便各自返回本界。其后,众神又再度对他说:‘如今也请诛灭仍居于大地之上的阿修罗。’”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse frames force as legitimate only when aligned with restoring cosmic and social order: once fear is removed and stability returns, the remaining source of harm is to be addressed. It implies a dharmic duty of protection—eliminating persistent threats so that peace is not merely temporary.
After the gods’ fear has been pacified, they return to their own realms. Then they again approach the addressed figure (identified in the accompanying prose as Agastya) and urge him to destroy the Asuras who are still residing on earth.