Madhu–Kaiṭabha, Nārāyaṇa’s Yoga-Nidrā, Rudra’s Manifestation, and the Aṣṭamūrti–Trimūrti Teaching
यः परान्ते परानन्दं पीत्वा दिव्यैकसाक्षिकम् / नृत्यत्यनन्तमहिमा तस्मै रुद्रात्मने नमः
yaḥ parānte parānandaṃ pītvā divyaikasākṣikam / nṛtyatyanantamahimā tasmai rudrātmane namaḥ
無量の威光を具し、究竟の終末において至上の歓喜—唯一の神聖なる証人—を「飲み」て、超越に舞う、自己そのものなるルドラに敬礼し奉る。
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara Gita section
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: raudra
It identifies Rudra with the innermost Self as the single divine Witness (sākṣī), and portrays liberation as resting in—indeed ‘imbibing’—supreme bliss at the highest culmination.
The verse points to sākṣī-bhāva (abiding as the Witness) and the consummation of Pashupata-oriented realization: the yogin internalizes the one divine witnessing awareness, culminating in bliss and transcendence.
Placed within the Ishvara Gita taught by Lord Kurma (Vishnu), it venerates Rudra as the Supreme Self, reflecting the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva-Vaishnava synthesis where the highest reality is one, praised through Shiva-language.