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Shloka 51

व्यपोहनस्तवनिरूपण-प्रसङ्गे नक्तभोजन-शिवव्रतविधिः (वार्षिक-प्रतिमास-क्रमः)

दत्त्वा गोमिथुनं चैव पाण्डुरं विधिपूर्वकम् सोमलोकमनुप्राप्य सोमेन सह मोदते

dattvā gomithunaṃ caiva pāṇḍuraṃ vidhipūrvakam somalokamanuprāpya somena saha modate

വിധിപൂർവ്വം പാണ്ഡുര (ശ്വേത) ഗോമിഥുനം ദാനം ചെയ്ത് സോമലോകം പ്രാപിച്ച് അവിടെ സോമനോടൊപ്പം ആനന്ദിക്കുന്നു.

दत्त्वा (dattvā)having given/donated
दत्त्वा (dattvā):
गोमिथुनम् (gomithunam)a pair of cows/cattle (male and female)
गोमिथुनम् (gomithunam):
चैव (caiva)and indeed
चैव (caiva):
पाण्डुरम् (pāṇḍuram)pale/white
पाण्डुरम् (pāṇḍuram):
विधिपूर्वकम् (vidhipūrvakam)according to proper rule/rite
विधिपूर्वकम् (vidhipūrvakam):
सोमलोकम् (somalokam)the world/realm of Soma (Moon)
सोमलोकम् (somalokam):
अनुप्राप्य (anuprāpya)having reached/attaining
अनुप्राप्य (anuprāpya):
सोमेन सह (somena saha)together with Soma
सोमेन सह (somena saha):
मोदते (modate)rejoices/delights
मोदते (modate):

Suta Goswami

S
Soma

FAQs

It frames charity (especially go-dana performed by vidhi) as an auxiliary dharmic act that purifies the worshipper and supports eligibility for Shiva-oriented sadhana by reducing bondage through merit.

While Shiva is not named directly, the verse reflects a Shaiva worldview: karmic actions yield finite heavenly results (Soma-loka), whereas the Pati (Shiva) is the ultimate liberator beyond such realms—implying that dana is supportive but not the final means of moksha.

It highlights vidhipūrvaka go-dana (ritually prescribed donation of a cow-pair). As a Shaiva discipline, it functions as dharma-sadhana that steadies the mind and prepares the paśu for higher practices like Shiva-puja and Pashupata-oriented restraint.