Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 31

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

पितामहश् च भो नन्दिन् नवतीर्णे महेश्वरे ममैव सफलं लोके जन्म वै जगतां प्रभो

pitāmahaś ca bho nandin navatīrṇe maheśvare mamaiva saphalaṃ loke janma vai jagatāṃ prabho

పితామహుడు (బ్రహ్మ) పలికెను— ఓ నందిన్, మహేశ్వరుడు అవతరించినందున ఈ లోకంలో నా జన్మ నిజంగా సఫలమైంది, ఓ జగత్ప్రభూ।

pitāmahaḥPitāmaha (Brahmā)
pitāmahaḥ:
caand/also
ca:
bhoO (vocative particle)
bho:
nandinO Nandin (Nandikeśvara)
nandin:
nava-tīrṇehaving newly descended/manifested
nava-tīrṇe:
maheśvarewhen/with Maheśvara (Śiva)
maheśvare:
mamamy
mama:
evaindeed
eva:
saphalamfruitful, fulfilled
saphalam:
lokein the world
loke:
janmabirth, embodiment
janma:
vaitruly, certainly
vai:
jagatāmof the worlds/of beings
jagatām:
prabhoO Lord
prabho:

Brahma (Pitamaha)

S
Shiva
N
Nandin
B
Brahma

FAQs

It frames Śiva’s manifestation as the very purpose of cosmic creation—implying that all ritual, including Liṅga-pūjā, is fulfilled when it culminates in direct devotion to and grace of Maheśvara (Pati).

Śiva is indicated as Jagat-prabhu, the sovereign Lord (Pati) whose descent makes existence meaningful; creation (Brahmā’s role) is secondary and finds completion only in Śiva’s presence and anugraha (grace).

The verse points to the core Shaiva principle behind Pāśupata orientation: the highest ‘practice’ is turning the pashu (soul) toward Pati through devotion and surrender, anticipating disciplined worship (pūjā) and yoga that seek Śiva’s darśana and grace.