कामप्रादुर्भावः — The Manifestation/Arising of Kāma
क्षीणमध्यश्चारुदन्तः प्रमत्तगजगंधनः । प्रफुल्लपद्मपत्राक्षः केसरघ्राणतर्पणः
kṣīṇamadhyaścārudantaḥ pramattagajagaṃdhanaḥ | praphullapadmapatrākṣaḥ kesaraghrāṇatarpaṇaḥ
Er ist schlank in der Mitte und besitzt schöne Hauer; Er gleicht dem Duft eines berauschten Elefanten. Seine Augen sind wie die Blütenblätter eines voll erblühten Lotos, und Er erfreut sich am Wohlgeruch des Kesar (Safran).
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva Purana to the sages at Naimisharanya, within the Rudra Samhita’s Sati Khanda context)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Mahadeva
Offering: pushpa
The verse supports saguna-upāsanā: contemplating Shiva’s auspicious, beautiful attributes steadies the mind and ripens devotion, which in Shaiva Siddhanta becomes a means for grace (anugraha) and inner purification.
While the Linga is the primary emblem of Shiva, such descriptive verses guide devotees to meditate on Shiva’s gracious, perceptible form (saguna) alongside Linga worship—uniting inner contemplation with outer reverence.
Use dhyāna (form-meditation): visualize lotus-petal eyes and auspicious beauty while chanting the Panchakshara mantra “Om Namaḥ Śivāya,” optionally offering fragrant substances (like saffron or sandal) as a bhakti-upacāra.