HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 27Shloka 6
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Vamana Purana — Shiva's Wedding Procession (Part 2), Shloka 6

Shiva’s Wedding Procession to Kailasa and the Marriage of Girija (Kali)

महास्थिशेखरी चारुरोचनालिकलो हरः सिंहाजिनी चालिनीलभुजङ्गकृतकुण्डलः

mahāsthiśekharī cārurocanālikalo haraḥ siṃhājinī cālinīlabhujaṅgakṛtakuṇḍalaḥ

{"primary_rasa": "adbhuta", "secondary_rasa": "shanta", "intensity": 7, "emotional_arc": "From vast attendant hosts to the austere purity of ūrdhvaretas ṛṣis, balancing spectacle with ascetic sanctity.", "mood_keywords": ["gaṇa-vaibhava", "tapas", "brahmacarya", "śuddhi", "maṅgala", "vismaya"]}

Narrative frame not stated in the provided excerpt (often Pulastya → Nārada in the Vāmana Purāṇa)
Shiva (Hara)
ShaivismIconographyAscetic symbolism

{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "raudra", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

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.