देवसान्त्वनम् (Devasāntvana) — “Consolation/Reassurance of the Gods”
हरपत्नी भविष्यामि सुगुप्तं मतमात्मनः । अद्भुता शिवलीला हि ज्ञानिनामपि मोहिनी
harapatnī bhaviṣyāmi suguptaṃ matamātmanaḥ | adbhutā śivalīlā hi jñānināmapi mohinī
“我将成为哈拉(湿婆)的圣配——这是我心中最深处的誓愿,谨慎密藏。诚然,湿婆的神圣戏游(līlā)奇妙无比,甚至能迷惑智者。”
Parvati
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Umāpati
Jyotirlinga: Tryambakeśvara
Sthala Purana: The verse’s theme of śiva-līlā that enchants even jñānins aligns with Tryambaka’s lore where Śiva’s presence at the source of the Godāvarī veils and reveals—granting both worldly boons and liberation through grace.
Significance: Pilgrims seek both pitṛ-śānti and mokṣa; the Siddhānta lens reads this as Śiva’s tirodhāna (concealment) and anugraha (revelation) operating together.
Type: stotra
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: teaching
Cosmic Event: Tirodhāna as cosmic principle: the Lord’s play conceals the inner resolve and even veils the wise, until anugraha dawns.
It highlights Parvati’s unwavering inner sankalpa to unite with Shiva and teaches that Shiva’s līlā operates beyond ordinary logic—drawing even the learned into devotion and wonder, ultimately turning the mind toward Shiva’s grace.
By affirming Shiva as Hara—the accessible, Saguna Lord who enters relationship through līlā—this verse supports devotional worship (including Linga-upāsanā) where the devotee is transformed by attraction to Shiva rather than by dry intellectualism alone.
A practical takeaway is to hold a steady inner resolve (sankalpa) and meditate on Shiva-līlā while chanting the Panchakshara mantra “Om Namah Shivaya,” letting devotion mature into clarity rather than mere fascination.