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Dharadharendra Nandini Vilasabandhu

Dharadharendra Nandini Vilasabandhu in English · English

🕉️ hindu·📿 11× repetitions·🕐 Monday evenings, Maha Shivaratri, or Pradosh Kaal·📜 Shiva Tandava Stotram, verse 3 (composed by Ravana)
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Meaning

This is the third verse of Ravana's Shiva Tandava Stotram, praying that the mind may delight in the sky-clad (Digambara) Shiva. It evokes Shiva as the loving companion of Parvati, joyful across all the horizons, whose unceasing flow of merciful glances wards off the most unbearable misfortunes. Its rolling, drum-like meter is among the most loved in the hymn.

Origin & Story

Shiva Tandava Stotram, verse 3 (composed by Ravana) · Ravana, King of Lanka · Treta Yuga (mythological era)

According to the Ramayana, Ravana was one of Shiva's greatest devotees. When he tried to lift Mount Kailash, Shiva pressed it down and crushed his fingers; in agony and devotion Ravana poured out the Shiva Tandava Stotram. This third verse turns from describing the cosmic dance to a tender prayer — that the mind may delight in the sky-clad Shiva, companion of Parvati, whose merciful glance wards off all calamity.

As told in scripture

Shiva was so moved by Ravana's Tandava Stotram that he forgave the act of uprooting Kailash and granted him the invincible Chandrahasa sword. Devotees hold that verses like this one — invoking the unceasing flow of Shiva's merciful glance — turn aside the direst misfortunes for those who chant them with faith.

The Mantra

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Dharadharendra nandini vilasabandhu bandhura Sphuraddiganta santati pramoda manamanase Kripakatakshadhorani niruddha durdharapadi Kvachiddigambare manovinodametu vastuni

Meaning:May my mind find delight in the sky-clad Shiva — the loving and graceful companion of Parvati (daughter of the mountain king), whose mind rejoices in all the radiant expanse of the worlds, and whose ceaseless stream of merciful sidelong glances holds back the direst calamities.

Word-by-Word Meaning

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Dharadharendra Nandini🔊Daughter of the king of mountains (Parvati)
Vilasa Bandhu🔊Loving companion in play and delight
Bandhura🔊Lovely, charming, graceful
Sphurat🔊Shining, throbbing, radiant
Diganta🔊The ends of all the directions, the horizons
Santati🔊Continuous expanse, the whole stretch
Pramoda Mana-manase🔊Whose mind rejoices and delights (in all the worlds)
Kripa Kataksha🔊Merciful sidelong glance
Dhorani🔊Continuous stream, flow
Niruddha🔊Held back, restrained, warded off
Durdhara-apadi🔊The direst, unbearable calamities
Digambare🔊In the sky-clad one (Shiva, clad in the directions)
Mano-vinodam Etu🔊May (my) mind find delight
Vastuni🔊In that (supreme) reality / being

Benefits of Chanting Dharadharendra Nandini Vilasabandhu

A cherished verse of the Shiva Tandava Stotram describing Shiva as the loving companion of Parvati

Its central prayer is that Shiva's merciful glance (kripa-kataksha) may ward off the direst calamities

Invokes the protective grace of the sky-clad Digambara form of Lord Shiva

The powerful rolling meter builds courage, fearlessness and devotional intensity

Especially powerful when chanted in Pradosh Kaal (evening twilight) on Mondays

Recited for relief from unbearable difficulties and dangers

How to Chant Dharadharendra Nandini Vilasabandhu

Repetitions11times
Best TimeMonday evenings, Maha Shivaratri, or Pradosh Kaal

Chant this verse from the Shiva Tandava Stotram with deep concentration, maintaining the powerful cadence of the meter even in transliteration. It is best recited in Pradosh Kaal (evening twilight); light a diya and offer bilva leaves if possible. It may be chanted alone, focusing on Shiva's protective merciful glance, or as part of the full Tandava Stotram.

Frequently Asked Questions

This page shows the complete Dharadharendra Nandini Vilasabandhu written in the English script — the same Sanskrit/Hindi verses, transliterated character-by-character so you can read and chant comfortably. Tap any line (or the ▶ button) to hear it recited aloud.
Yes — only the script changes; the words and their meaning are the original. The verse-by-verse meaning, benefits and how-to-chant guidance on this page apply exactly the same.
It is a name of Parvati — 'the daughter (nandini) of the king of mountains (dharadharendra)'. The verse describes Shiva as her loving and graceful companion (vilasa-bandhu), and prays that the devotee's mind may delight in this sky-clad Lord.
It is the third verse of the Shiva Tandava Stotram, the thunderous hymn composed by Ravana, the devotee-king of Lanka, in praise of Lord Shiva's cosmic Tandava dance.
It prays that the mind may find delight in the Digambara (sky-clad) Shiva, whose ceaseless stream of merciful sidelong glances (kripa-kataksha-dhorani) holds back even the most unbearable calamities (durdhara-apadi).
Best chanted on Mondays, during Pradosh Kaal (evening twilight), on Maha Shivaratri, or during Shravan — and any time you seek Shiva's protective grace against difficulties.

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