वसन्तस्वरूपवर्णनम् — Description of the Form/Nature of Vasant
a
एभिस्सहचरैः काम वसंत प्रमुखैर्भवान् । मोहयस्व महादेवं रत्या सह महोद्यतः
ebhissahacaraiḥ kāma vasaṃta pramukhairbhavān | mohayasva mahādevaṃ ratyā saha mahodyataḥ
હે કામ! વસંત વગેરે સહચરો સાથે, રતિ સહિત, મહા ઉત્સાહથી આગળ વધ અને મહાદેવ પર મોહ છાંટ।
Brahmā (in the Satīkhaṇḍa narrative, commissioning Kāma)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Shakti Form: Rati
Role: creative
It highlights the Shaiva teaching that kāma (desire) and moha (delusion) are forces that bind ordinary beings, yet Mahādeva—Pati, the Lord beyond māyā—cannot be truly overpowered by them; the episode reveals Śiva’s transcendence and the ultimate futility of attempting to bind the Absolute with passion.
The narrative frames Śiva as the supreme reality who may appear in a saguna, approachable form within the story, yet remains inwardly untouched; Linga-worship trains the devotee to see Śiva as the stable, desireless ground of consciousness while the mind’s impulses (kāma, vasantādi) rise and fall.
A practical takeaway is to counter kāma and moha through japa of the Pañcākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”), supported by Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) and Rudrākṣa as reminders of vairāgya (dispassion) and Śiva-centered awareness.