गिरिजातपः-परीक्षा तथा सप्तर्षि-आह्वानम्
Girijā’s Austerity-Test and the Summoning of the Seven Sages
अमंगलवपुर्धारी निर्लज्जोऽसदनोऽकुली । कुवेषी प्रेतभूतादिसंगी नग्नौ हि शूलभृत्
amaṃgalavapurdhārī nirlajjo'sadano'kulī | kuveṣī pretabhūtādisaṃgī nagnau hi śūlabhṛt
„Er trägt eine Gestalt, die unheilvoll erscheint; schamlos, ohne Heim und ruhelos. Schlecht gekleidet, in Gesellschaft von Pretas, Bhūtas und dergleichen—ja, nackt, den Dreizack tragend.“
Suta Goswami (narrating the characterization of Shiva as perceived by worldly minds within the Parvati Khanda narrative)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: teaching
The verse highlights how Shiva’s ascetic, cremation-ground-associated appearance can be misread as “inauspicious,” while Shaiva teaching points to his transcendence of worldly purity/impurity and his role as Pati (the Lord) who liberates beings beyond social and sensory judgments.
It contrasts external form with inner reality: Saguna Shiva may appear as the naked trident-bearing ascetic, yet in Linga worship devotees approach the same Supreme as the all-pervading, auspicious consciousness—teaching that devotion should not depend on outward appearances.
A practical takeaway is to cultivate vairagya and steady japa of the Panchakshara (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”), supported by Shaiva marks like Tripundra (bhasma) and Rudraksha, remembering Shiva as the trident-bearer who cuts the bonds (pāśa) of fear and judgment.