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Shloka 29

Adhyaya 61 — ग्रह-नक्षत्र-स्थाननिर्णयः

Cosmic Abodes of Luminaries and the Shaiva Order of Time

द्विगुणः सूर्यविस्ताराद् विस्तारः शशिनः स्मृतः तुल्यस्तयोस्तु स्वर्भानुर् भूत्वाधस्तात्प्रसर्पति

dviguṇaḥ sūryavistārād vistāraḥ śaśinaḥ smṛtaḥ tulyastayostu svarbhānur bhūtvādhastātprasarpati

സൂര്യവ്യാപ്തിയെക്കാൾ ശശി (ചന്ദ്രൻ)യുടെ വ്യാപ്തി ഇരട്ടിയെന്ന് സ്മൃതം; സ്വർഭാനു (രാഹു) ഇരുവരോടും തുല്യപ്രമാണനായിട്ട് അവരുടെ കീഴിലൂടെ സരിച്ച് സഞ്ചരിക്കുന്നു.

द्विगुणःtwice
द्विगुणः:
सूर्य-विस्तारात्than the Sun’s expanse/diameter
सूर्य-विस्तारात्:
विस्तारःextent, diameter
विस्तारः:
शशिनःof the Moon
शशिनः:
स्मृतःis remembered/declared (in tradition)
स्मृतः:
तुल्यःequal
तुल्यः:
तयोःof the two (Sun and Moon)
तयोः:
तुindeed
तु:
स्वर्भानुःSvarbhānu (Rāhu)
स्वर्भानुः:
भूत्वाhaving become
भूत्वा:
अधस्तात्beneath, below
अधस्तात्:
प्रसर्पतिmoves, creeps/glides
प्रसर्पति:

Suta Goswami (narrating traditional cosmology to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Surya
S
Shashi (Chandra)
S
Svarbhanu (Rahu)

FAQs

It frames the cosmos as a measured, law-governed order; in Linga worship this supports the insight that Shiva as Pati is the unseen regulator behind all visible movements, so the devotee turns from changing phenomena to the steadfast Linga-principle.

Indirectly: by describing fixed proportions and ordained motion, it implies a transcendent governor beyond the grahas—Shiva-tattva as Pati, the supreme intelligence that upholds niyati (cosmic order) while remaining untouched by it.

Not a direct puja-vidhi verse; the takeaway aligns with Pashupata discipline—cultivating steadiness and detachment by contemplating cosmic order, especially during eclipses as times for japa, Shiva-dhyana, and restraint.