Shiva’s Wedding Procession to Kailasa and the Marriage of Girija (Kali)
महास्थिशेखरी चारुरोचनालिकलो हरः सिंहाजिनी चालिनीलभुजङ्गकृतकुण्डलः
mahāsthiśekharī cārurocanālikalo haraḥ siṃhājinī cālinīlabhujaṅgakṛtakuṇḍalaḥ
{"bhagavata_parallel": null, "vishnu_purana_parallel": null, "ramayana_connection": null, "mahabharata_echo": "Epic portrayals of gaṇas and great ṛṣis attending divine events; ūrdhvaretas as a recognized ascetic epithet.", "other_puranas": ["Shiva Purana: gaṇa descriptions and ṛṣi participation in Śiva’s līlās", "Skanda Purana: gaṇa hosts and ascetic seers in Śaiva sacred narratives", "Brahmanda Purana: ascetic categories and their powers"], "vedic_reference": "General Vedic-āraṇyaka valuation of brahmacarya/tapas (no direct mantra cited)."}
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "raudra", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Śiva’s adornments invert worldly luxury: bones, skins, and serpents symbolize mastery over fear, death, and desire—an ethic of detachment and inner sovereignty.
It is descriptive material within Vaṃśānucarita/Ākhyāna-style narration (characterization of deities), not a primary cosmogonic (sarga) passage.
Lion-skin indicates untamed power subdued; serpent-earrings signify control of primal energies (nāga/kuṇḍalinī resonances in later readings) and fearlessness in the cremation-ground aesthetic of Śaiva theology.