अघोराय सुघोराय घोराघौघ विदारिणे । भर्गाय भवबीजानां भंजनाय गरीयसे । नमो विध्वस्तमोहाय विशदात्मगुणाय च
aghorāya sughorāya ghorāghaugha vidāriṇe | bhargāya bhavabījānāṃ bhaṃjanāya garīyase | namo vidhvastamohāya viśadātmaguṇāya ca
Salutations to the Non‑terrifying One, and to the supremely formidable—He who rends apart the hordes of terror. Salutations to Bharga, the Radiant Destroyer, who shatters the seeds of worldly becoming, the Most Venerable. Salutations to You who have destroyed delusion, whose innate qualities are utterly clear and stainless.
King (Rājā) praising Śiva (implicit)
Listener: Śaunaka and the Naimiṣāraṇya ṛṣis
Scene: A king-devotee stands with folded hands before a luminous Śiva; the deity appears simultaneously serene (Aghora) and formidable (Sughora), with a halo of fire consuming dark seed-like forms symbolizing bhava-bīja and moha.
Śiva is both gentle and awe-inspiring, protector and liberator—destroying fear, delusion, and the roots of rebirth.
No specific tīrtha is named; the verse is a protective and liberative Śiva-stuti.
No explicit ritual; it supports protective recitation and devotion to Śiva for cutting off moha and bhavabīja.