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Shloka 6

Indra’s Account: Shilada’s Tapas and Shiva’s Manifestation as Nandi

तपतस्तस्य तपसा प्रभुस्तुष्टाथ शङ्करः तुष्टस्तवेत्यथोवाच सगणश्चोमया सह

tapatastasya tapasā prabhustuṣṭātha śaṅkaraḥ tuṣṭastavetyathovāca sagaṇaścomayā saha

Als er seine Askese weiter übte, wurde Herr Śaṅkara — der erhabene Pati — durch jenes Tapas zufrieden. Dann sprach Er, begleitet von Seinen Gaṇas und zusammen mit Umā: „Ich bin mit dir zufrieden.“

tapatasof the one performing austerity
tapatas:
tasyaof him
tasya:
tapasāby (his) austerity/tapas
tapasā:
prabhuḥthe Lord, sovereign
prabhuḥ:
tuṣṭaḥpleased
tuṣṭaḥ:
athathen
atha:
śaṅkaraḥŚaṅkara (Śiva)
śaṅkaraḥ:
tuṣṭaḥpleased
tuṣṭaḥ:
tavawith you/for you
tava:
itithus
iti:
athathen
atha:
uvācasaid/spoke
uvāca:
sa-gaṇaḥtogether with (His) gaṇas
sa-gaṇaḥ:
caand
ca:
umayā sahaalong with Umā (Pārvatī)
umayā saha:

Suta Goswami (narrating the episode; Shiva speaks within the narrative)

S
Shiva
S
Shankara
U
Uma
P
Parvati
G
Ganas

FAQs

It shows the core principle behind Linga-Puja and Shaiva devotion: sincere tapas and worship draw the Pati (Shiva) to grant darśana and grace, which is the true “fruit” beyond outer ritual.

Shiva is presented as Prabhu/Pati—supreme and free—yet responsive to devotion. His pleasure (tuṣṭi) signifies anugraha-śakti, the liberating grace that loosens Pāśa for the Pāśu (bound soul).

Tapas (austerity) is emphasized as a Shaiva sādhanā aligned with Pāśupata discipline—inner heat, restraint, and steadfast practice culminating in Shiva’s direct acknowledgment and blessing.