Rudra-Śiva: Names, Two Natures, and the Logic of Epithets (रुद्रनाम-बहुरूपत्व-प्रकरणम्)
केशास्थिकलिले भीमे कपालघटसंकुले । गृध्रगोमायुबहुले चिताग्निशतसंकुले
keśāsthikalile bhīme kapālaghaṭasaṅkule | gṛdhragomāyubahule citāgniśatasaṅkule ||
摩诃提婆说道:“这可怖的火葬场,是发与骨的泥沼;其间拥塞着骷髅与瓦罐。秃鹫与豺狼成群出没,四处尽是数百座熊熊燃烧的葬火柴堆。”
श्रीमहेश्वर उवाच
The verse uses stark śmaśāna imagery to confront impermanence and fear: what is normally shunned as impure and terrifying becomes a setting that exposes the body’s fate and loosens attachment. In Śaiva ethical-spiritual context, dwelling amid death can symbolize transcendence of social fear, bodily identification, and conventional notions of purity.
Śrīmahēśvara describes the cremation-ground as a horrific place—choked with hair and bones, strewn with skulls and pots, swarming with vultures and jackals, and lit by countless pyres. The description functions as a response within a dialogue (implied by the surrounding prose in the edition) that questions why one would remain in such an impure, fearsome place.