Adhyaya 44: Nandikesvara’s Manifestation and Abhisheka; The Rule of Namaskara in Shiva-Nama
रथश् च हेमच्छत्रं च चन्द्रबिंबसमप्रभम् अद्यापि सदृशः कश्चिन् मया नास्ति विभुः क्वचित्
rathaś ca hemacchatraṃ ca candrabiṃbasamaprabham adyāpi sadṛśaḥ kaścin mayā nāsti vibhuḥ kvacit
«وكانت هناك مركبةٌ، ومظلّةٌ من ذهبٍ تشعّ كقرص القمر؛ وحتى اليوم لا أجد في أي مكان ربًّا ذا سلطانٍ يساويني.»
Suta Goswami (narrating a quoted boast within the story; contextual speaker: a proud ruler/overlord)
It contrasts external emblems of power (chariot, golden parasol) with true sovereignty, implying that Linga-bhakti requires humility and turning from ego-based dominion toward Pati (Shiva).
By showing the speaker’s boast as limited and comparative, it indirectly points to Shiva-tattva as incomparable—Pati is not measured by worldly splendour but is the absolute Lord beyond all “equals.”
The implied practice is ego-purification central to Pashupata discipline: reducing ahamkara (a pasha) so the pashu (soul) can become fit for Shiva-puja and inner surrender.