तुष्टेनदेवदेवेन स्वमौलौ यो धृतः स्वयम् । आदाय तां कलामेकां जगत्संजविनीं पराम्
tuṣṭenadevadevena svamaulau yo dhṛtaḥ svayam | ādāya tāṃ kalāmekāṃ jagatsaṃjavinīṃ parām
ولمّا رضي إلهُ الآلهة (شيفا) وضعه بنفسه على تاجه؛ ثم أخذ من تلك «الكَلا» السامية، المُحيية للعالم، جزءًا واحدًا…
Skanda (deduced, Kāśīkhaṇḍa context) to Agastya
Tirtha: Avimukta/Viśveśa sphere—Candrasekhara grace motif
Type: kshetra
Listener: Pilgrimage audience
Scene: Śiva, pleased, lifts Soma and sets him upon His matted hair/crown; a radiant ‘kalā’ is drawn forth like a luminous crescent, spreading vitality across the worlds.
Śiva’s favor elevates and protects; divine closeness becomes a source of renewal for the world.
Within Kāśīkhaṇḍa, this supports the Candreśvara/Amṛtodaka sacred complex in Avimukta-Kāśī.
None directly; it explains the theological basis for Soma’s restoration through Śiva’s grace.