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Shloka 130

Adhyaya 71: पुरत्रयवृत्तान्तः—ब्रह्मवरदानम्, मयकृतत्रिपुर-निर्माणम्, विष्णुमाया-धर्मविघ्नः, शिवस्तुति, त्रिपुरदाहोपक्रमः

स्कन्दमालिङ्ग्य चाघ्राय नृत्य पुत्रेत्युवाच ह सो ऽपि लीलालसो बालो ननर्तार्तिहरः प्रभुः

skandamāliṅgya cāghrāya nṛtya putretyuvāca ha so 'pi līlālaso bālo nanartārtiharaḥ prabhuḥ

స్కందుని ఆలింగనం చేసి స్నేహంతో అతని శిరస్సును మ్రోగి, “నర్తించు, నా కుమారా” అని అన్నారు. అప్పుడు లీలామయ బాలుడు, ఆర్తిహర ప్రభువు స్కందుడు కూడా నర్తించసాగాడు।

skandamSkanda (Kartikeya)
skandam:
āliṅgyahaving embraced
āliṅgya:
caand
ca:
āghrāyahaving smelled (in affection)
āghrāya:
nṛtyadance
nṛtya:
putraO son
putra:
itithus
iti:
uvācasaid
uvāca:
haindeed
ha:
saḥ apihe also
saḥ api:
līlālasaḥdelighting in divine play
līlālasaḥ:
bālaḥthe child
bālaḥ:
nanartadanced
nanarta:
ārtiharaḥremover of suffering
ārtiharaḥ:
prabhuḥLord, sovereign
prabhuḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating the episode within the Purana’s internal story)

S
Skanda
S
Shiva

FAQs

It highlights the compassionate, accessible nature of Pati (Shiva): the Lord who is worshiped as the Linga is not only transcendent but also intimate—bestowing grace through affectionate lila that removes the devotee’s ārtis (afflictions).

Shiva-tattva is shown as both sovereign (prabhu) and tenderly immanent: as Pati, he commands and blesses, and through mere presence and love he uplifts the pashu (bound soul) from pasha (sorrow and bondage).

The verse implicitly points to bhakti as a Pashupata-oriented discipline: surrender to the Lord’s will (“dance, my son”) and participation in sacred lila, which becomes a means of inner purification and removal of duḥkha.