Shloka 86

यजुर्वेदसमायुक्तं पञ्चत्रिंशच्छुभाक्षरम् कलाष्टकसमायुक्तं सुश्वेतं शान्तिकं तथा

yajurvedasamāyuktaṃ pañcatriṃśacchubhākṣaram kalāṣṭakasamāyuktaṃ suśvetaṃ śāntikaṃ tathā

యజుర్వేదంతో సంయుక్తమై, ముప్పైఐదు శుభాక్షరాలతో కూడి, అష్టకలలతో సంపన్నమై—అత్యంత శ్వేతమై శాంతికర స్వభావముగల మంత్రం ఇది।

yajurveda-samāyuktamconjoined with the Yajurveda
yajurveda-samāyuktam:
pañcatriṃśatthirty-five
pañcatriṃśat:
śubha-akṣaramauspicious syllables/letters
śubha-akṣaram:
kalā-aṣṭaka-samāyuktamendowed with the set of eight kalās (energies/aspects)
kalā-aṣṭaka-samāyuktam:
su-śvetamvery white, brilliantly pure
su-śvetam:
śāntikampacificatory, bringing peace and appeasement
śāntikam:
tathāand so/likewise/thus
tathā:

Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga Purana to the sages at Naimisharanya, describing a Shaiva mantra/mark of the Linga tradition)

S
Shiva
L
Linga
Y
Yajurveda

FAQs

It characterizes a Liṅga-related Śaiva mantra as Veda-aligned (Yajurveda), syllable-defined, and inherently śāntika—supporting Liṅga-pūjā as a Vedic, peace-bestowing discipline leading the paśu (soul) toward Pati (Śiva).

Śiva-tattva is indicated as supremely pure (suśveta) and pacifying (śāntika), operating through kalās (divine powers) that loosen pāśa (bondage) and steady the paśu in serenity and clarity.

A śānti-oriented mantra-prayoga tied to Yajurvedic usage is implied—supporting Liṅga-pūjā and Pāśupata-aligned inner pacification (śamana) through disciplined japa and contemplation of Śiva’s kalās.