Go, my Lord of the Mountains, bring our daughter home. After giving Gauri away to the Naked One, how can you sit at home so unconcerned? What a hard heart you have! You know the behaviour of your son-in-law- always acting like a lunatic, wearing a tiger's skin, with matted locks on his head. He not only roams the cremation ground himself, but takes her, too! Such is Uma's fate. I heard Narada say he smears his body with funeral pyre ash. The way he dresses is monstrous: the garland around his neck is made of snakes! And who would believe me- he prefers poison to honey! Tell me, what kind of choice is that? --------- Kamalakanta BhattacharyaHere Parvati is shown lovingly offering bhang, the favorite herbal intoxicant of ascetics to Shiva. They are both seated on a leopard skin. The ashen Shiva wears a loincloth, armbands, and Rudraksha bead malas as also precious necklaces. A snake coils around his neck forming another necklace and also at the same time partaking of the bhang being offered to Shiva.
A skull and burning logs in the foreground create the ambience of a cremation ground. The kamandal and staff point to the essentially ascetic nature of Shiva.
Parvati is shown bejewelled and well-groomed, a perfect contrast to the naked ascetic with his unruly hair sliding down his shoulders like serpentine coils. This apparent opposition in their respective natures is the cause of the concern, expressed by the poet above.
The tree in the background displays a fine foliage and the amber background creates a somber and languid afternoon mood. The whole composition is framed in an oval floral frame.
Of Related Interest:
Concocting Bhang (Miniature Painting on Paper)
Kamandalu (The Cauldron of Shiva) (Brass vessel)
Shiva - The Sensuous Yogi (Article)
Parvati the Love Goddess: Tales of Marriage and Devotion in Art and Mythology (Article)
The Trinetra Shiva Head (Wall hanging)
Om Namoh Shivai (Religious Shawl)
Shiva Parvati (Comic Book)
Lord Shiva (Sterling Silver Pendant)