गिरिजातपः-परीक्षा तथा सप्तर्षि-आह्वानम्
Girijā’s Austerity-Test and the Summoning of the Seven Sages
अमंगलवपुर्धारी निर्लज्जोऽसदनोऽकुली । कुवेषी प्रेतभूतादिसंगी नग्नौ हि शूलभृत्
amaṃgalavapurdhārī nirlajjo'sadano'kulī | kuveṣī pretabhūtādisaṃgī nagnau hi śūlabhṛt
അവന്റെ ദേഹരൂപം അമംഗളമായി തോന്നുന്നു; അവൻ നിർലജ്ജൻ, ഭവനമില്ലാത്തവൻ, അശാന്തൻ. കുവേഷധാരി, പ്രേത-ഭൂതാദികളുടെ കൂട്ടുകാരൻ; നഗ്നനായി ത്രിശൂലം ധരിക്കുന്നു।
Suta Goswami (narrating the characterization of Shiva as perceived by worldly minds within the Parvati Khanda narrative)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: teaching
The verse highlights how Shiva’s ascetic, cremation-ground-associated appearance can be misread as “inauspicious,” while Shaiva teaching points to his transcendence of worldly purity/impurity and his role as Pati (the Lord) who liberates beings beyond social and sensory judgments.
It contrasts external form with inner reality: Saguna Shiva may appear as the naked trident-bearing ascetic, yet in Linga worship devotees approach the same Supreme as the all-pervading, auspicious consciousness—teaching that devotion should not depend on outward appearances.
A practical takeaway is to cultivate vairagya and steady japa of the Panchakshara (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”), supported by Shaiva marks like Tripundra (bhasma) and Rudraksha, remembering Shiva as the trident-bearer who cuts the bonds (pāśa) of fear and judgment.