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Shloka 13

दारुवनलीला—नीललोहितपरीक्षा, ब्रह्मोपदेशः, अतिथिधर्मः, संन्यासक्रमः

वनोटजद्वारगताश् च नार्यो विस्रस्तवस्त्राभरणा विचेष्टाः लब्ध्वा स्मितं तस्य मुखारविन्दाद् द्रुमालयस्थास् तम् अथान्वयुस्ताः

vanoṭajadvāragatāś ca nāryo visrastavastrābharaṇā viceṣṭāḥ labdhvā smitaṃ tasya mukhāravindād drumālayasthās tam athānvayustāḥ

สตรีที่ยืนอยู่ ณ ธรณีประตูเรือนพักในป่า—ผ้าและเครื่องประดับหลุดลุ่ย อาการสับสนไร้สำรวม—เมื่อได้รับเพียงรอยยิ้มจากพระพักตร์ดุจดอกบัวของพระองค์ เหล่าผู้อยู่ท่ามกลางพฤกษาก็พากันติดตามเสด็จไป

vanaforest
vana:
oṭajahut (leaf-hut)
oṭaja:
dvāra-gatāḥstationed at the doorway
dvāra-gatāḥ:
caand
ca:
nāryaḥwomen
nāryaḥ:
visrastaloosened, slipping down
visrasta:
vastragarments
vastra:
ābharaṇaornaments
ābharaṇa:
viceṣṭāḥwith altered movements/behavior, agitated
viceṣṭāḥ:
labdhvāhaving obtained/received
labdhvā:
smitama smile
smitam:
tasyaof him
tasya:
mukha-aravindātfrom the lotus-face
mukha-aravindāt:
druma-ālaya-sthāḥdwelling in tree-groves/among trees
druma-ālaya-sthāḥ:
tamhim
tam:
athathen
atha:
anvayuḥthey followed
anvayuḥ:
tāḥthose (women).
tāḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It highlights that mere outer ritual status or social identity cannot shield the pashu (bound soul) from māyā; true approach to the Liṅga—Shiva as Pati—requires inner steadiness beyond sensory fascination.

Shiva appears as the sovereign Pati whose presence effortlessly stirs the mind; his smile symbolizes the activating power of consciousness that exposes bondage (pāśa) and compels beings to move toward or away from liberation.

The implied teaching is vairāgya and sense-restraint central to Pāśupata-oriented discipline: recognizing agitation as pāśa and turning the mind from fascination to Shiva-centered awareness (smaraṇa/dhyāna).