Muñjavān on Himavat: Maheśvara’s abode, Śiva-stuti, and sacrificial gold
Chapter 8
तीक्ष्णदंष्टाय तीक्ष्णाय वैश्वानरमुखाय च । महाद्युतये5नज्राय सर्वाय पतये विशाम्
tīkṣṇadaṃṣṭrāya tīkṣṇāya vaiśvānaramukhāya ca | mahādyutaye 'najrāya sarvāya pataye viśām ||
Wika ni Saṃvarta: “(Iniaalay ko ang paggalang) sa may matutulis na pangil, sa Mabagsik, sa may mukhang tulad ni Vaiśvānara (apoy na lumalamon sa lahat); sa may dakilang ningning, sa Hindi tumatanda; sa Lahat, sa Panginoon, tagapagtanggol at pinuno ng mga bayan.”
संवर्त उवाच
The verse frames the divine as both awe-inspiring and protective: fierce like consuming fire, yet the sovereign guardian of peoples. Ethically, it suggests reverence for a power that upholds order and safeguards society, even when it appears terrifying in its destructive aspect.
Saṃvarta utters a hymn-like salutation, stringing together epithets in the dative case to praise and invoke a supreme, fire-faced, radiant, unaging Lord—presented as the master and protector of human communities.