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Shloka 3

Indra’s Account: Shilada’s Tapas and Shiva’s Manifestation as Nandi

वल्मीकेनावृताङ्गश् च लक्ष्यः कीटगणैर्मुनिः वज्रसूचीमुखैश्चान्यै रक्तकीटैश् च सर्वतः

valmīkenāvṛtāṅgaś ca lakṣyaḥ kīṭagaṇairmuniḥ vajrasūcīmukhaiścānyai raktakīṭaiś ca sarvataḥ

वल्मीकेनावृताङ्गश्च लक्ष्यः कीटगणैर्मुनिः। वज्रसूचीमुखैश्चान्यै रक्तकीटैश्च सर्वतः॥

valmīkenaby an anthill
valmīkena:
āvṛta-aṅgaḥwhose limbs were covered
āvṛta-aṅgaḥ:
caand
ca:
lakṣyaḥa target/mark
lakṣyaḥ:
kīṭa-gaṇaiḥby multitudes of insects
kīṭa-gaṇaiḥ:
muniḥthe sage
muniḥ:
vajra-sūcī-mukhaiḥwith mouths like a vajra-needle (hard, piercing)
vajra-sūcī-mukhaiḥ:
ca anyaiḥand by others
ca anyaiḥ:
rakta-kīṭaiḥby blood-red worms/insects
rakta-kīṭaiḥ:
caand
ca:
sarvataḥfrom all sides/everywhere
sarvataḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames the ascetic’s unwavering tapas as the inner prerequisite for true Liṅga-bhakti—steadiness that purifies the pashu (individual soul) so it can approach Pati (Śiva) beyond bodily disturbance.

By implication, Śiva-tattva is the unshaken ground of consciousness: the sage’s endurance mirrors the Shaiva ideal of abiding in the Self while pasha—pain, fear, and bodily limitation—attempts to dominate.

Tapas as a limb of Pāśupata discipline—patient endurance and withdrawal from body-identification—showing how austerity weakens pasha and stabilizes the seeker in devotion to Śiva.