Śiva-nāmānukīrtana-prastāvaḥ
Prologue to the praise of Śiva and the Upamanyu testimony
शत्रुनाशक श्रीकृष्ण! आप जिनकी प्रार्थना करते हैं
śatrunāśaka śrīkṛṣṇa! āpa jinakī prārthanā karate haiṃ, ve teja aura tapasyā-kī nidhi, acintya bhagavān śaṅkara yahāṃ śama-ādi śubha-bhāvoṃ kī sṛṣṭi aura kāma-ādi aśubha-bhāvoṃ kā saṃhāra karate hue devī pārvatī ke sātha sadā virājamāna rahate haiṃ.
يا شري كريشنا، يا مُهلكَ الأعداء! إنّ الذي ترفع إليه صلواتك هو بهاگَفان شانكَرا—كنزٌ لا يُتصوَّر من البهاء والتقشّف—يقيم هنا أبدًا مع الإلهة بارفتي، يُنشئ أحوالًا مباركة كالسكون، ويقمع الدوافع المشؤومة كالشهوة.
वासुदेव उवाच
True auspiciousness is the cultivation of inner restraint (śama and related virtues) and the checking of disruptive impulses (kāma and the like). The verse presents Śaṅkara as the divine power who supports this ethical inner order, making spiritual discipline and self-mastery central to dharma.
Vāsudeva addresses Kṛṣṇa with reverence and points to Śaṅkara—whom Kṛṣṇa himself prays to—as eternally present with Pārvatī, actively fostering auspicious qualities and restraining harmful passions. The statement elevates Śiva’s role as a moral and spiritual regulator within the discourse of Anuśāsana.