अविमुक्तक्षेत्रमाहात्म्य — काशी-वाराणसी में मोक्ष, लिङ्ग-तीर्थ-मानचित्र, और उपासना-विधि
क्वचित् प्रफुल्लाम्बुजरेणुभूषितैर् विहङ्गमैश् चानुकलप्रणादिभिः विनादितं सारसचक्रवाकैः प्रमत्तदात्यूहवरैश् च सर्वतः
kvacit praphullāmbujareṇubhūṣitair vihaṅgamaiś cānukalapraṇādibhiḥ vināditaṃ sārasacakravākaiḥ pramattadātyūhavaraiś ca sarvataḥ
وفي مواضعَ كان المكان مُزَيَّنًا بغبار لقاح اللوتس المتفتّح تمامًا، ويترنّم بأصوات الطيور العذبة المنتظمة. وكان يدوّي في كل ناحية نداءُ طيور sarasa وcakravāka، ومعها طيور dātyūha المتميّزة المبتهجة. إن هذا المشهد السمعي المُقدَّس يُسكّن paśu (النفس الفردية) ويُرجِع الذهن إلى الداخل نحو Pati، شيفا.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
The verse frames an ideal tīrtha-like setting—pure waters, lotuses, and auspicious natural sounds—that calms the senses and prepares the devotee for focused Liṅga-pūjā, where the pashu turns from pasha-bound distraction toward Pati, Śiva.
Śiva-tattva is implied as the still center that such purity and harmony reveal: when the environment becomes sattvic and resonant with order, the mind naturally inclines toward the transcendent Pati who is beyond noise, yet reflected through sacred harmony.
It most directly supports dhyāna and japa as preparatory limbs for Pashupata-oriented devotion—choosing a pure, serene place (deśa-śuddhi) to stabilize attention before Liṅga-arcana or contemplative absorption.