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Shloka 36

सूर्यरथ-रचना, ध्रुव-प्रेरणा, मास-गणाः च

Jyotish-chakra: Surya’s Motion and Monthly Retinues

रक्षोहेतिः प्रहेतिश् च पौरुषेयो वधस् तथा सर्पो व्याघ्रः पुनश्चापो वातो विद्युद्दिवाकरः

rakṣohetiḥ prahetiś ca pauruṣeyo vadhas tathā sarpo vyāghraḥ punaścāpo vāto vidyuddivākaraḥ

ومن «أسباب الأذى» هجماتُ الرّاكشاسا، والاعتداءاتُ المفاجئة، وعنفُ البشر، والموت؛ وكذلك أخطارُ الحيّات والنمور؛ ثم أخطارُ السلاح، والرياح العاتية، والبرق، والشمس المحرِقة. وفي مثل هذه الشدائد يُلتمَس پَتي—شِڤا—ملجأً أعلى، فهو الذي يقطع «پاشا» التي تُقيّد الـ«پاشو».

rakṣaḥa rākṣasa/demonic force
rakṣaḥ:
hetiḥa blow/attack, cause of injury
hetiḥ:
prahetiḥa sudden strike/assault, projectile-attack
prahetiḥ:
caand
ca:
pauruṣeyaḥarising from human agency
pauruṣeyaḥ:
vadhaḥkilling, violent death
vadhaḥ:
tathālikewise
tathā:
sarpaḥserpent
sarpaḥ:
vyāghraḥtiger
vyāghraḥ:
punaḥagain, further
punaḥ:
cāpaḥweapon (lit. bow
cāpaḥ:
vātaḥwind, storm
vātaḥ:
vidyutlightning
vidyut:
divākaraḥthe sun (day-maker), scorching heat
divākaraḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

By listing external and internal sources of danger, the verse frames Linga-worship as śaraṇāgati to Pati (Śiva), the protector who dissolves fear and cuts the pāśas that keep the paśu bound to suffering.

Śiva-tattva is implied as the transcendent refuge beyond all upadravas—demonic, human, and elemental—showing Pati’s lordship over both beings and the forces of nature.

The practical takeaway is protective śiva-upāsanā—Linga-dhyāna, japa, and Pāśupata-oriented surrender—used as a discipline to stabilize the mind in danger and overcome fear-born bondage.