वासिष्ठकथनम् (आदित्य–सोमवंशवर्णनम् तथा रुद्रसहस्रनाम-प्रशंसा)
बन्धनस्तु सुरेन्द्राणां युधि शत्रुविनाशनः सखा प्रवासो दुर्वापः सर्वसाधुनिषेवितः
bandhanastu surendrāṇāṃ yudhi śatruvināśanaḥ sakhā pravāso durvāpaḥ sarvasādhuniṣevitaḥ
তেওঁ সুৰেন্দ্ৰসকলৰ বন্ধন (নিয়ন্তা); যুদ্ধত শত্রুনাশক। তেওঁ সখা; তেওঁ প্ৰবাস—বৈৰাগ্যনিবাসী; তেওঁ দুৰ্বাপ—দুৰ্লভপ্ৰাপ্ত প্ৰভু। তেওঁ সৰ্ব সাধুৰ দ্বাৰা নিষেৱিত, পূজিত আৰু আশ্ৰিত।
Suta Goswami (narrating a Shiva-Sahasranama portion to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Shiva as both the transcendent goal (durvāpaḥ) and the intimate refuge (sakhā), teaching that Linga-upāsanā is simultaneously devotion and liberation—approaching Pati who alone can cut the pasha of bondage.
Shiva-tattva is shown as paradoxically immanent and transcendent: He governs even the Devas (bandhanaḥ surendrāṇām), protects dharma by destroying hostile forces (śatru-vināśanaḥ), and yet remains beyond ordinary reach (durvāpaḥ), known through the sādhus’ realization.
The verse points to sādhus’ continual resort to Shiva (sarva-sādhu-niṣevitaḥ), implying disciplined upāsanā—japa/stotra of the Sahasranāma and Pāśupata-style vairāgya (pravāsaḥ as holy withdrawal) to approach the Hard-to-attain Lord.