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Shloka 40

अध्याय १०१: हैमवती-तपः, तारकवंश-उत्पातः, स्कन्द-प्रत्याशा, मदनदहनम्

ततः सम्प्रेक्ष्य मदनं हसन् देवस् त्रियंबकः नयनेन तृतीयेन सावज्ञं तम् अवैक्षत

tataḥ samprekṣya madanaṃ hasan devas triyaṃbakaḥ nayanena tṛtīyena sāvajñaṃ tam avaikṣata

అప్పుడు మదనుని చూచి త్ర్యంబక దేవుడు చిరునవ్వు చిందించి, తృతీయ నేత్రంతో అవజ్ఞాభావంతో అతనిని తిలకించాడు—పశువును బంధించే కామపాశం పతిని తాకదని ప్రకటించినట్లు।

tataḥthen
tataḥ:
samprekṣyahaving looked at/observed
samprekṣya:
madanamMadana (Kāma, the god of desire)
madanam:
hasansmiling/laughing
hasan:
devaḥthe God, the Deva
devaḥ:
triyaṃbakaḥthe three-eyed One (Shiva)
triyaṃbakaḥ:
nayanenawith the eye
nayanena:
tṛtīyenathe third
tṛtīyena:
sāvajñamcontemptuously/disdainfully, with disregard
sāvajñam:
tamhim
tam:
avaikṣatahe looked at, he beheld/fixed his gaze
avaikṣata:

Suta Goswami (narrating the Purana; describing Shiva’s act within the story)

S
Shiva
M
Madana (Kama)

FAQs

It highlights Shiva as Pati—the sovereign Lord beyond kama—so Linga worship is approached with inner purity and vairagya, offering desire itself into Shiva’s jñāna-fire.

Shiva is shown as Triyambaka whose third eye signifies transcendent awareness that overrules the guṇas; He is not compelled by passions that bind the paśu under pāśa.

The yogic takeaway is desire-mastery (kāma-jaya) through inner awakening—meditating on the ‘third eye’ (jñāna-dṛṣṭi) while performing Shiva-puja with restraint and focused mantra.