Śiva-stavarāja: Upamanyu’s Preface and Initiation of the Śarva-Nāma Enumeration
Anuśāsana-parva 17
छत्र॑ सुच्छत्रो विख्यातो लोक: सर्वाश्रय: क्रम: । मुण्डो विरूपो विकृतो दण्डी कुण्डी विकुर्वण:
chatraṁ succhatro vikhyāto lokaḥ sarvāśrayaḥ kramaḥ | muṇḍo virūpo vikṛto daṇḍī kuṇḍī vikurvaṇaḥ ||
Vāyu-deva dit : «Il est un dais qui abrite—un protecteur d’excellence—renommé comme le monde lui-même, et l’ordre, la marche des choses, qui soutient tout. Il apparaît la tête rasée, d’une forme saisissante, adoptant des conduites non conformes; portant le bâton et le bol d’aumône, il est celui dont la vraie nature ne se saisit pas par les seuls actes extérieurs.»
वायुदेव उवाच
The verse teaches that the highest reality (here praised through epithets) both sustains the cosmos as its ‘order’ and may appear in paradoxical, ascetic forms; therefore, ethical discernment should not judge the divine or the truly great merely by external appearance or unconventional conduct.
Vāyu-deva speaks a hymn-like description, listing striking attributes—protector of all, identical with the world and its governing course, yet also appearing as a shaven-headed mendicant with staff and bowl—emphasizing a deity’s/ideal being’s hidden greatness behind austere or unusual outward signs.