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Shloka 69

दारुवनलीला—नीललोहितपरीक्षा, ब्रह्मोपदेशः, अतिथिधर्मः, संन्यासक्रमः

वक्तुमर्हसि देवेश संन्यासं वै क्रमेण तु द्रष्टुं वै देवदेवेशम् उग्रं भीमं कपर्दिनम्

vaktumarhasi deveśa saṃnyāsaṃ vai krameṇa tu draṣṭuṃ vai devadeveśam ugraṃ bhīmaṃ kapardinam

Ô Seigneur des devas, daigne exposer, selon l’ordre juste, la discipline du saṃnyāsa (renoncement), par laquelle on obtient la vision du Dieu des dieux : Rudra, le farouche et redoutable Kapardin. Lui seul est Pati, le libérateur des paśu (âmes liées) des entraves du pāśa.

वक्तुम्to speak/explain
वक्तुम्:
अर्हसिyou are able/you ought
अर्हसि:
देवेशO Lord of the gods
देवेश:
संन्यासम्renunciation, formal relinquishment of worldly identity
संन्यासम्:
वैindeed
वै:
क्रमेणin due order, step-by-step
क्रमेण:
तुand/then
तु:
द्रष्टुम्to see, to behold (darśana)
द्रष्टुम्:
वैindeed
वै:
देवदेवेशम्the Lord of the lords of gods
देवदेवेशम्:
उग्रम्fierce, formidable
उग्रम्:
भीमम्terrible, awe-inspiring
भीमम्:
कपर्दिनम्the matted-haired One (Śiva/Rudra).
कपर्दिनम्:

A deva/supplicant addressing Shiva (internal dialogue within Suta’s narration)

S
Shiva (Rudra/Kapardin)

FAQs

It links outer devotion to inner qualification: true approach to the Linga (Śiva as Pati) is supported by saṃnyāsa/vairāgya undertaken in a disciplined sequence that culminates in Śiva-darśana.

Śiva is named as Devadeveśa—supreme over all divine powers—and as Ugra/Bhīma, indicating the transcendent, unconditioned Lord whose overwhelming majesty dissolves pāśa (bondage) and reveals Pati-tattva.

Saṃnyāsa-krama—stepwise renunciation aligned with Pāśupata-oriented discipline—emphasizing detachment, right conduct, and contemplative pursuit of Śiva’s darśana rather than mere external rite.