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Shloka 8

नन्दिकेश्वरोत्पत्तिः — Nandikesvara’s Origin, Shiva’s Boons, and the Rise of Sacred Rivers

मित्रावरुणनामानौ तपोयोगबलान्वितौ तस्याश्रमं गतौ दिव्यौ द्रष्टुं मां चाज्ञया विभोः

mitrāvaruṇanāmānau tapoyogabalānvitau tasyāśramaṃ gatau divyau draṣṭuṃ māṃ cājñayā vibhoḥ

پھر مِتر اور وَرُن نام کے وہ دونوں دیویہ، تپسیا اور یوگ کے بَل سے یُکت ہو کر اُس کے آشرم کو گئے؛ اور سَروَشَکتِمان پرَبھو (پتی) کے حکم سے مجھے درشن کرنے آئے۔

मित्रावरुण-नामानौbearing the names Mitra and Varuṇa
मित्रावरुण-नामानौ:
तपस्-योग-बल-अन्वितौendowed with strength arising from austerity and yogic discipline
तपस्-योग-बल-अन्वितौ:
तस्यof him / his
तस्य:
आश्रमम्hermitage, āśrama
आश्रमम्:
गतौwent, proceeded
गतौ:
दिव्यौthe two divine beings
दिव्यौ:
द्रष्टुम्to see
द्रष्टुम्:
माम्me
माम्:
and
:
आज्ञयाby the command
आज्ञया:
विभोःof the Supreme Lord, the Omnipotent (Pati)
विभोः:

Suta Goswami (narrating a prior episode; internal speaker implied by 'me')

M
Mitra
V
Varuna
V
Vibhu (Shiva as the Supreme Lord/Pati)

FAQs

It frames sacred encounters as occurring by the Lord’s (Pati’s) explicit command—implying that true approach to Shiva and his sacred sphere (āśrama/linga-kṣetra) is guided by divine ordinance, not mere curiosity.

Shiva is indicated as Vibhu—the all-pervading, omnipotent Pati—whose ājñā governs even exalted Vedic deities, showing his supremacy over cosmic functions and their administrators.

Tapas-yoga-bala is emphasized: power gained through disciplined austerity and yogic integration, aligning the practitioner (pashu) toward the Lord’s will and loosening pasha (bondage) through divine-oriented practice.