Adhyaya 8: Yogasthanas, Ashtanga Yoga, Pranayama-Siddhi, and Shiva-Dhyana leading to Samadhi
सगर्भो ऽगर्भ इत्युक्तः सजपो विजपः क्रमात् इभो वा शरभो वापि दुराधर्षो ऽथ केसरी
sagarbho 'garbha ityuktaḥ sajapo vijapaḥ kramāt ibho vā śarabho vāpi durādharṣo 'tha kesarī
يُدعى «سَغَرْبها» ويُدعى أيضًا «أَغَرْبها»—ذو صورةٍ ومع ذلك متعالٍ عن كلّ رحم. وبحسب الترتيب هو «سَجَپا» و«ڤِجَپا»، ربّ المانترا المنطوقة والمانترا التي ترنّ في الداخل بلا نطق. وهو الفيل وهو الشَّرَبها أيضًا—لا يُقهَر ولا يُدانى—وهو كذلك الأسد: باتي، الحامي الأسمى الذي يقهر جميع قيود الباشو.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s epithets to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Shiva as both immanent (sagarbha) and transcendent (agarbha), guiding the devotee to worship the Linga as the manifest support of the unmanifest Pati—beyond birth, yet present for grace.
Shiva-tattva is shown as paradox-resolving: He can be spoken of as ‘with form’ and ‘formless/unborn’, and as the supreme, unassailable Lord (durādharṣa) who stands above all pasha (bondage) and protects the paśu (soul).
It highlights japa in two modes—sajapa (audible repetition) and vijapa (silent inner recitation), pointing to Pashupata-oriented inner mantra discipline where awareness becomes continuous remembrance of Shiva.