हिरण्यनेत्रस्य तपः — Hiraṇyanetra’s Austerity and the Boon
मंत्रिणः ऊचुः । गुहांतरे ध्याननिमीलिताक्षो दैत्येन्द्र कश्चिन्मुनिरत्र दृष्टः । रूदान्वितश्चन्द्रकलार्द्धचूडः कटिस्थले बद्धगजेन्द्रकृत्तिः
maṃtriṇaḥ ūcuḥ | guhāṃtare dhyānanimīlitākṣo daityendra kaścinmuniratra dṛṣṭaḥ | rūdānvitaścandrakalārddhacūḍaḥ kaṭisthale baddhagajendrakṛttiḥ
大臣たちは言った。「おおダイティヤの主よ、洞窟の奥にて、眼を閉じて禅定に入る一人の牟尼を我らは見ました。その傍らにはルドラがあり――頂に半月を戴き、腰には象王の皮を結びつけておられました。」
The ministers (counsellors) addressing the Daitya-king
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Gajasamhāramūrti
Sthala Purana: The verse situates Rudra in a cave with ascetic-meditative presence; while not a Jyotirliṅga episode, it echoes many sthala-purāṇas where Śiva is ‘guha-vāsin’ (cave-dweller) granting darśana to seekers.
Significance: Cave-darśana motif: approaching Śiva in secluded places symbolizes interiorization; merit is framed as gaining proximity to the Lord beyond asuric perception.
It highlights Shiva (Rudra) as the living presence behind true meditation: the sage’s inward absorption is shown as inseparable from Rudra’s grace, indicating that liberation arises when the mind rests in the Lord (Pati) beyond fear and conflict.
The verse presents Saguna Shiva through recognizable marks (crescent moon, elephant-hide garment), supporting devotional contemplation (dhyāna) on Shiva’s form—an aid that, in Shaiva Siddhanta, matures the soul toward realizing Shiva’s transcendent nature.
It suggests dhyāna with closed eyes and steady awareness of Rudra; as a practical takeaway, one may combine silent japa of “Om Namaḥ Śivāya” with Shiva-dhyāna, ideally accompanied by Shaiva observances like bhasma (Tripuṇḍra) where appropriate.