अघोराय सुघोराय घोराघौघ विदारिणे । भर्गाय भवबीजानां भंजनाय गरीयसे । नमो विध्वस्तमोहाय विशदात्मगुणाय च
aghorāya sughorāya ghorāghaugha vidāriṇe | bhargāya bhavabījānāṃ bhaṃjanāya garīyase | namo vidhvastamohāya viśadātmaguṇāya ca
畏れなき御方に、また至って峻厳なる御方に—恐怖の群れを裂き砕く御方に—礼拝します。光輝の破壊者バルガに、世の生成の種子を打ち砕く最も尊き御方に礼拝します。迷妄を滅し、本性の徳が澄みきり無垢なるあなたに礼拝します。
King (Rājā) praising Śiva (implicit)
Listener: Śaunaka and the Naimiṣāraṇya ṛṣis
Scene: A king-devotee stands with folded hands before a luminous Śiva; the deity appears simultaneously serene (Aghora) and formidable (Sughora), with a halo of fire consuming dark seed-like forms symbolizing bhava-bīja and moha.
Śiva is both gentle and awe-inspiring, protector and liberator—destroying fear, delusion, and the roots of rebirth.
No specific tīrtha is named; the verse is a protective and liberative Śiva-stuti.
No explicit ritual; it supports protective recitation and devotion to Śiva for cutting off moha and bhavabīja.