Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 4

अघोरस्य प्रादुर्भावः कुमारकचतुष्टयं च योगमार्गः

अथापश्यन्महातेजाः प्रादुर्भूतं कुमारकम् कृष्णवर्णं महावीर्यं दीप्यमानं स्वतेजसा

athāpaśyanmahātejāḥ prādurbhūtaṃ kumārakam kṛṣṇavarṇaṃ mahāvīryaṃ dīpyamānaṃ svatejasā

تب اُس مہاتجسوی نے اچانک ظاہر ہوئے دیویہ کمار کو دیکھا—سیاہ رنگ، عظیم قوت والا، اپنے ہی نور سے درخشاں۔

athathen
atha:
apaśyatsaw/beheld
apaśyat:
mahā-tejāḥone of great radiance (the mighty, luminous one)
mahā-tejāḥ:
prādurbhūtammanifested, become visible
prādurbhūtam:
kumārakama child, youthful divine being
kumārakam:
kṛṣṇa-varṇamdark-complexioned, black-hued
kṛṣṇa-varṇam:
mahā-vīryamof great power/valor/energy
mahā-vīryam:
dīpyamānamblazing, shining intensely
dīpyamānam:
sva-tejasāby his own splendor/inner radiance
sva-tejasā:

Suta Goswami (narrating the Purva-Bhaga account to the sages, with an internal narrative describing what a great radiant being saw)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It emphasizes svatejas—self-born radiance—an essential marker of Shiva’s Linga as the self-established (svayambhū) sign of Pati, not dependent on any external source for sanctity or power.

By presenting a being who “blazes by his own splendor,” it points to Shiva-tattva as self-revealing consciousness-power (cit-śakti), transcending created luminosities and standing as the sovereign Pati over all pashus.

The verse primarily highlights darśana (vision) of the self-luminous Lord—an inner yogic recognition aligned with Pāśupata orientation—where the seeker turns from borrowed lights to the direct apprehension of Shiva’s innate tejas.