Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
ऐश्वर्यवर्त्मनिलया विरक्ता गरुडासना / जयन्ती हृद्गुहा रम्या गह्विरेष्ठा गणाग्रणीः
aiśvaryavartmanilayā viraktā garuḍāsanā / jayantī hṛdguhā ramyā gahvireṣṭhā gaṇāgraṇīḥ
Siya’y nananahan sa landas ng banal na paghahari (aiśvarya) at siya mismo’y walang pagkapit; nakaluklok sa Garuḍa. Siya si Jayantī—laging nagwawagi; ang lihim na yungib ng puso; ang Kaibig-ibig; ang pinakadakila sa mga malalalim at nakatagong katotohanan; at ang pangunahing pinuno ng mga hukbong makalangit.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing in the Ishvara Gita context (Devi-stuti/epithets as part of the teaching)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
By calling the Goddess “hṛdguhā,” it points to the Supreme Reality as inwardly realized—present as the deepest, hidden ground within the heart, known through inner contemplation rather than external grasping.
The emphasis on dispassion (viraktā) and the heart-cave (hṛdguhā) aligns with meditative inwardness in the Kurma Purana’s yoga-ethos: cultivate vairāgya, withdraw attention into the heart, and contemplate the profound (gahvira) divine presence.
Though using Vaishnava imagery (Garuḍa), the verse praises the one Shakti who also leads the gaṇas—bridging Vaishnava and Shaiva worlds and reflecting the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian unity of divine principles.