Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 6

Indra’s Account: Shilada’s Tapas and Shiva’s Manifestation as Nandi

तपतस्तस्य तपसा प्रभुस्तुष्टाथ शङ्करः तुष्टस्तवेत्यथोवाच सगणश्चोमया सह

tapatastasya tapasā prabhustuṣṭātha śaṅkaraḥ tuṣṭastavetyathovāca sagaṇaścomayā saha

جب وہ تپسیا میں لگا رہا تو اس تپسیا سے پروردگار شنکر خوش ہوئے۔ پھر گنوں کے ساتھ اور اُما کے ہمراہ انہوں نے فرمایا: “میں تم سے راضی ہوں۔”

tapatasof the one performing austerity
tapatas:
tasyaof him
tasya:
tapasāby (his) austerity/tapas
tapasā:
prabhuḥthe Lord, sovereign
prabhuḥ:
tuṣṭaḥpleased
tuṣṭaḥ:
athathen
atha:
śaṅkaraḥŚaṅkara (Śiva)
śaṅkaraḥ:
tuṣṭaḥpleased
tuṣṭaḥ:
tavawith you/for you
tava:
itithus
iti:
athathen
atha:
uvācasaid/spoke
uvāca:
sa-gaṇaḥtogether with (His) gaṇas
sa-gaṇaḥ:
caand
ca:
umayā sahaalong with Umā (Pārvatī)
umayā saha:

Suta Goswami (narrating the episode; Shiva speaks within the narrative)

S
Shiva
S
Shankara
U
Uma
P
Parvati
G
Ganas

FAQs

It shows the core principle behind Linga-Puja and Shaiva devotion: sincere tapas and worship draw the Pati (Shiva) to grant darśana and grace, which is the true “fruit” beyond outer ritual.

Shiva is presented as Prabhu/Pati—supreme and free—yet responsive to devotion. His pleasure (tuṣṭi) signifies anugraha-śakti, the liberating grace that loosens Pāśa for the Pāśu (bound soul).

Tapas (austerity) is emphasized as a Shaiva sādhanā aligned with Pāśupata discipline—inner heat, restraint, and steadfast practice culminating in Shiva’s direct acknowledgment and blessing.