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Shloka 111

अविमुक्तक्षेत्रमाहात्म्य — काशी-वाराणसी में मोक्ष, लिङ्ग-तीर्थ-मानचित्र, और उपासना-विधि

बहवः शतशो ऽभ्येत्य नमश्चक्रुर्महेश्वरम् पुनर्निरीक्ष्य योगेशं ध्यानयोगं च कृत्स्नशः

bahavaḥ śataśo 'bhyetya namaścakrurmaheśvaram punarnirīkṣya yogeśaṃ dhyānayogaṃ ca kṛtsnaśaḥ

Beaucoup—par centaines—s’approchèrent et se prosternèrent devant Maheśvara. Puis, contemplant de nouveau Yogēśa, le Seigneur du Yoga, ils virent pleinement toute la voie du dhyāna-yoga : Śiva, le Pati, révélé comme la forme même et la source de l’absorption yogique.

bahavaḥmany
bahavaḥ:
śataśaḥby hundreds, in great numbers
śataśaḥ:
abhyetyahaving approached
abhyetya:
namaḥ cakruḥthey made obeisance, bowed
namaḥ cakruḥ:
maheśvaramto Maheshvara (the Great Lord)
maheśvaram:
punaḥagain
punaḥ:
nirīkṣyahaving looked upon, having beheld
nirīkṣya:
yogeśamthe Lord of Yoga (Shiva)
yogeśam:
dhyāna-yogamthe yoga of meditation, contemplative absorption
dhyāna-yogam:
caand
ca:
kṛtsnaśaḥcompletely, in its entirety
kṛtsnaśaḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva
M
Maheshvara
Y
Yogesha

FAQs

It links outer reverence (namaskara to Maheshvara) with inner worship—dhyana-yoga—showing that true Linga devotion culminates in meditative vision of Shiva as Pati, the indwelling Lord.

Shiva is presented as Yogesha, the sovereign of yoga itself—implying He is not merely an object of meditation but the very ground of yogic realization, beyond pasha (bondage) and the revealer of liberation for the pashu (soul).

Dhyana-yoga is highlighted: approaching with humility (namaskara) and then sustained contemplative seeing—an inward Pashupata-oriented practice where devotion matures into absorption in Shiva.