Shiva’s Wedding Procession to Kailasa and the Marriage of Girija (Kali)
महास्थिशेखरी चारुरोचनालिकलो हरः सिंहाजिनी चालिनीलभुजङ्गकृतकुण्डलः
mahāsthiśekharī cārurocanālikalo haraḥ siṃhājinī cālinīlabhujaṅgakṛtakuṇḍalaḥ
He shone forth with bracelets of great serpents and jewels, with a necklace, armlets, and anklets; bearing a lofty mass of matted hair, he sat upon the bull and radiated splendor.
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Śiva’s adornments invert worldly luxury: bones, skins, and serpents symbolize mastery over fear, death, and desire—an ethic of detachment and inner sovereignty.
It is descriptive material within Vaṃśānucarita/Ākhyāna-style narration (characterization of deities), not a primary cosmogonic (sarga) passage.
Lion-skin indicates untamed power subdued; serpent-earrings signify control of primal energies (nāga/kuṇḍalinī resonances in later readings) and fearlessness in the cremation-ground aesthetic of Śaiva theology.