Rudra’s Cosmic Dance and the Recognition of Rudra–Nārāyaṇa Unity (Īśvara-gītā Continuation)
सहस्रशिरसं देवं सहस्रचरणाकृतिम् / सहस्रबाहुं जटिलं चन्द्रार्धकृतशेखरम्
sahasraśirasaṃ devaṃ sahasracaraṇākṛtim / sahasrabāhuṃ jaṭilaṃ candrārdhakṛtaśekharam
ข้าพเจ้าขอเพ่งภาวนาต่อพระผู้เป็นเจ้า—ผู้มีเศียรพัน เผยรูปเป็นบาทพัน มีกรพัน ทรงชฎา และทรงอัญมณีเป็นเสี้ยวจันทร์บนพระเศียร
Narratorial/recitational voice within a Shiva-dhyana (meditative eulogy) sequence in the Kurma Purana
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
By attributing “thousand heads, feet, and arms,” the verse points to an all-pervading, cosmic Lord whose presence is not confined to a single body—an iconographic way of indicating the Supreme as vast, manifold, and immanent.
This is a dhyāna-style visualization: fixing the mind on specific divine marks (jaṭā, crescent moon, cosmic limbs) to steady attention (ekāgratā). In the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva orientation, such form-based contemplation supports inner stillness leading toward knowledge of Ishvara.
Though explicitly describing Shiva’s form, the cosmic “thousand-limbed” imagery echoes pan-Indic depictions of the Supreme (also used for Vishnu), aligning with the Kurma Purana’s tendency to present a shared, non-sectarian vision of Ishvara expressed through both Shiva and Vishnu.