यं स्तौति वेदस्तमहं प्रपद्ये तत्पुरुषसंज्ञं शरणं द्वितीयम् । त्वां विद्महे तच् नस्त्वं प्रदेहि श्रीरुद्र देवेश नमोनमस्ते
yaṃ stauti vedastamahaṃ prapadye tatpuruṣasaṃjñaṃ śaraṇaṃ dvitīyam | tvāṃ vidmahe tac nastvaṃ pradehi śrīrudra deveśa namonamaste
Ich nehme Zuflucht zu Dem, den die Veden preisen—zur zweiten Zuflucht, genannt Tatpuruṣa. Wir erkennen Dich; gewähre uns eben diese Gnade. O Śrī Rudra, Herr der Götter, immer wieder sei Dir Verehrung.
A dvija devotee (as implied by the immediate narrative context)
Scene: A devotee with folded hands stands before a radiant four/five-faced Śiva, the Tatpuruṣa aspect emphasized; Vedic seers and subtle Veda-mantras appear as luminous script around the deity.
True refuge is Śiva as revealed by the Veda; knowledge must mature into prayer for anugraha (divine grace).
No site is directly named; the verse is a face-aspect (Tatpuruṣa) praise within the chapter’s sacred narrative.
An implied upāsanā: taking refuge (prapatti) and repeated salutations (namas), akin to mantra-style devotion.