गिलासुर-आक्रमणम् तथा शिवसैन्य-समाह्वानम् — The Assault of Gila and Śiva’s Mobilization
प्रमत्तैर्वेतालैस्सुदृढकरतुंडैरपि खगैवृकैर्नानाभेदैश्शवकुणपपूर्णास्यकवलैः । विकीर्णे संग्रामे कनककशिपोर्वंशजनकश्चिरं युद्धं कृत्वा हरिहरमहेन्द्रैश्च विजितः
pramattairvetālaissudṛḍhakaratuṃḍairapi khagaivṛkairnānābhedaiśśavakuṇapapūrṇāsyakavalaiḥ | vikīrṇe saṃgrāme kanakakaśiporvaṃśajanakaściraṃ yuddhaṃ kṛtvā hariharamahendraiśca vijitaḥ
当战场陷入四散的混乱——狂乱的毗陀罗(vetāla)、喙坚力猛的凶鸟,以及各类豺狼,口中塞满尸骸碎肉——那时,希兰尼亚迦湿布(Hiraṇyakaśipu)一族的始祖久战不息,终究仍被哈利(毗湿奴)、哈罗(湿婆)与摩诃因陀罗(因陀罗)所击败。
Sūta Gosvāmin (narrating to the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Rudra
The verse portrays the collapse of asuric arrogance: even a powerful progenitor of a demonic line is overcome when the divine powers aligned with dharma—Śiva (Hara), Viṣṇu (Hari), and Indra (Mahendra)—act together. It emphasizes that tamas and violence ultimately consume themselves, while divine order prevails.
By naming Hara as a decisive divine force, the verse supports Saguna Śiva-bhakti—worship of Śiva as the active Lord who destroys impurity and protects cosmic balance. In Linga worship, the devotee remembers Śiva as the remover of fear and the purifier who ends the reign of adharma.
A practical takeaway is fearlessness through japa and purification: recite the Pañcākṣarī ("Om Namaḥ Śivāya") with Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) and Rudrākṣa, contemplating Śiva as Hara who dissolves inner tamas, anger, and pride—the roots of asuric downfall.