नारदतपोवर्णनम्
Nārada’s Austerities Described
हिमशैलगुहायां हि मुनिस्तपति नारदः । मनसोद्दिश्य विश्वेशं महासंयमवान्दृढः
himaśailaguhāyāṃ hi munistapati nāradaḥ | manasoddiśya viśveśaṃ mahāsaṃyamavāndṛḍhaḥ
แท้จริงแล้ว ในถ้ำแห่งเทือกเขาหิมาลัย ฤๅษีนารทได้บำเพ็ญตบะ ด้วยมหาสังยมนิ่งแน่ว เขาตรึงจิตภายในไว้ที่วิศเวศะ ผู้เป็นเจ้าแห่งสากลจักรวาล
Sūta Gosvāmin
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Īśāna
Jyotirlinga: Viśvanātha
Sthala Purana: The epithet Viśveśa/Viśvanātha evokes Kāśī, where Śiva is famed as Lord of the Universe granting taraka-upadeśa at death; this verse’s ‘Viśveśa’ dhyāna naturally aligns with that sthala-tradition though the immediate narrative is Himalayan tapas.
Significance: Dhyāna of Viśveśa is held to confer inner steadiness and Śiva’s grace; in Kāśī-tradition, remembrance of Viśvanātha is linked with liberation (mokṣa) and fearlessness at the time of death.
Type: stotra
Role: teaching
The verse presents a Shaiva model of sādhana: intense tapas supported by saṃyama (self-restraint) and one-pointed inner contemplation of Viśveśa (Śiva), showing that liberation-oriented practice is rooted in disciplined mind and devotion to Pati (the Lord).
Although no outer Liṅga is described here, the practice is Saguna-upāsanā: Nārada fixes the mind on Viśveśa as the personal Lord. In Shaiva Siddhānta, such focused remembrance (smaraṇa/dhyāna) complements external Liṅga worship and ripens the soul for Śiva’s grace.
It suggests dhyāna with strong saṃyama—steady inner fixation on Śiva—often supported in Shaiva practice by mantra-japa (e.g., Om Namaḥ Śivāya), along with austerity, simplicity, and disciplined senses.