Monday, July 20, 2009

A Hymn to Shiva by Swami Vivekananda


Salutation to Shiva! whose glory

Is immeasurable, who resembles sky

In clearness, to whom are attributed

The phenomena of all creation,


The preservation and dissolution

Of the universe! May the devotion,

The burning devotion of this my life

Attach itself to Him, to Shiva, who,

While being Lord of all, transcends Himself.


In whom Lordship is ever established,

Who causes annihilation of delusion,

Whose most surpassing love, made manifest,

Has crowned Him with a name above all names,

The name of “Mahadeva”, the Great God!

Whose warm embrace, of Love personified,

Displays, within the heart, that all power

Is but a semblance and a passing show.

In which the tempest of the whole past blows,

Past Samskaras, stirring the energies

With violence, like water lashed to waves;

In which the dual consciousness of “I” and “Thou”

Plays on: I salute that mind unstable,

Centered in Shiva, the abode of calm!


Where the ideas of parent and produced,

Purified thoughts and endless varied forms,

Merge in the Real one; where the existence ends

Of such conceptions as “within”, “without”–

The wind of modification being stilled–

That Hara I worship, the suppression

Of movements of the mind. Shiva I hail!


From whom all gloom and darkness have dispersed;

That radiant Light, white, beautiful

As bloom of lotus white is beautiful;

Whose laughter loud sheds knowledge luminous;

Who, by undivided meditation,

Is realized in the self-controlled heart:

May that Lordly Swan of the limpid lake

Of my mind, guard me, prostrate before Him!


Him, the Master-remover of evil,

Who wipes the dark stain of this Iron Age;

Whom Daksha’s Daughter gave Her coveted hand;

Who, like the charming water-lily white,

Is beautiful; who is ready ever

To part with life for others’ good, whose gaze

Is on the humble fixed; whose neck is blue

With the poison swallowed:

Him, we salute!

This is a translation of Swami Vivekananda’s Sanskrit Hymn to Shiva, reproduced from his

Complete Works 4: 501-04.