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Shloka 8

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

ततः प्रणम्य देवेशं स्तुत्वोवाच शिलाशनः हर्षगद्गदया वाचा सोमं सोमविभूषणम्

tataḥ praṇamya deveśaṃ stutvovāca śilāśanaḥ harṣagadgadayā vācā somaṃ somavibhūṣaṇam

于是,石座者(Śilāśana)礼拜天神之主,赞颂后开口——因欢喜而声音颤动——向苏摩(Soma)致意:那作为装饰之月,亦是至上Pati以苏摩为庄严者。

tataḥthen
tataḥ:
praṇamyahaving bowed/prostrated
praṇamya:
deveśamthe Lord of the gods (Pati, supreme ruler)
deveśam:
stutvāhaving praised
stutvā:
uvācasaid/spoke
uvāca:
śilāśanaḥŚilāśana (proper name, the speaker)
śilāśanaḥ:
harṣa-gadgadayāfaltering/trembling due to delight
harṣa-gadgadayā:
vācāwith (his) speech/voice
vācā:
somamSoma, the Moon-deity
somam:
soma-vibhūṣaṇamHe whose ornament is Soma (an epithet pointing to Śiva as Candrasekhara/Soma-bearing Lord).
soma-vibhūṣaṇam:

Śilāśana (within Suta’s narration)

S
Shiva
S
Soma (Chandra)

FAQs

It foregrounds the core upacāras of Śaiva pūjā—praṇāma (prostration) and stuti (hymnic praise)—as the devotee approaches the Pati (Lord) with a heart softened by bhakti, a prerequisite for Linga-upāsanā.

By calling Him Deveśa and Soma-vibhūṣaṇa, the verse points to Śiva as the sovereign Pati who transcends yet graciously bears cosmic symbols (like Soma) as ornaments—signifying mastery over time, mind, and luminous consciousness.

Praṇāma and stuti are highlighted—devotional disciplines that steady the pashu (individual soul), loosen pasha (bondage) through humility and reverence, and prepare the aspirant for deeper Śaiva sādhana, including Pāśupata-oriented worship.