Śatarudrīya-prabhāva and Rudra’s Supremacy (शतरुद्रीयप्रभावः)
दिव्यचन्दनसंयुक्तं दिव्यधूपेन धूपितम् तत् सदो वृषभाड्कस्य दिव्यवादित्रनादितम्
Nārada uvāca: divya-candana-saṁyuktaṁ divya-dhūpena dhūpitam; tat sado vṛṣabhāṅkasya divya-vāditra-nāditam.
Nārada disse: «O salão de assembleia do Senhor do estandarte do Touro (Śiva) estava ungido com sândalo celestial e perfumado com incenso do céu; e ressoava continuamente com a música de instrumentos divinos.»
नारद उवाच
The verse highlights bhakti expressed through sanctity and reverent celebration: the divine presence is approached with purity (sandalwood), auspicious fragrance (incense), and harmonious sound (music), suggesting that devotion is both inner reverence and outwardly ordered worship.
Nārada is describing Śiva’s splendid assembly hall: it is richly perfumed and anointed, and it continually echoes with divine instrumental music, portraying Mahādeva’s court as a sacred, radiant gathering place.