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Shloka 58

वासिष्ठकथनम् (आदित्य–सोमवंशवर्णनम् तथा रुद्रसहस्रनाम-प्रशंसा)

उन्मत्तवेषः प्रच्छन्नः सर्वलोकः प्रजापतिः महारूपो महाकायः सर्वरूपो महायशाः

unmattaveṣaḥ pracchannaḥ sarvalokaḥ prajāpatiḥ mahārūpo mahākāyaḥ sarvarūpo mahāyaśāḥ

Viste el atuendo de un asceta enloquecido, y sin embargo permanece oculto más allá del reconocimiento ordinario. Él es el mundo mismo de todos los seres, Prajāpati, Señor de la progenie. Inmenso en forma y de cuerpo cósmico, asume toda forma; su gloria es inconmensurable: Śiva, el Pati que trasciende y a la vez lo penetra todo.

unmatta-veṣaḥone who has the guise/attire of a madman (avadhūta-like ascetic)
unmatta-veṣaḥ:
pracchannaḥconcealed, veiled, hidden
pracchannaḥ:
sarva-lokaḥall worlds, the totality of realms/beings
sarva-lokaḥ:
prajāpatiḥlord of creatures/progeny, cosmic progenitor
prajāpatiḥ:
mahā-rūpaḥof great/cosmic form
mahā-rūpaḥ:
mahā-kāyaḥof immense body, cosmic-bodied
mahā-kāyaḥ:
sarva-rūpaḥof all forms, assuming every form
sarva-rūpaḥ:
mahā-yaśāḥof great fame/glory
mahā-yaśāḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya, within a Shiva-stuti/sahasranama-style passage)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Shiva as both concealed and all-pervading—supporting Linga worship as devotion to the transcendent Pati who is beyond form yet present in every form.

Shiva-tattva is shown as paradoxical: veiled to ordinary perception (pracchanna) yet identical with the cosmos (sarvaloka), the sovereign source (prajāpati), and the one who manifests as all forms (sarvarūpa).

The takeaway aligns with Pashupata Yoga: cultivate inner recognition of the Pati beyond external veils (veṣa), using worship and contemplation to pierce pasha (bondage) and perceive Shiva’s all-form nature.