Adhyaya 72 — Puradāha: Rudra’s Cosmic Chariot, Pāśupata-Vrata, and Brahmā’s Shiva-Stuti
अजवक्त्रो हयवक्त्रो गजवक्त्रो ऽर्ध्ववक्त्रकः इत्याद्याः परिवार्येशं लक्ष्यलक्षणवर्जिताः
ajavaktro hayavaktro gajavaktro 'rdhvavaktrakaḥ ityādyāḥ parivāryeśaṃ lakṣyalakṣaṇavarjitāḥ
‘ছাগমুখ, অশ্বমুখ, গজমুখ, ঊর্ধ্বমুখ’ ইত্যাদি নানা পরিচারক-রূপ ঈশ্বরকে ঘিরে বর্ণিত; কিন্তু স্বয়ং ঈশ—পরম পতি—কোনো লক্ষ্য-লক্ষণহীন, চিহ্ন ও সীমাবদ্ধ গুণের অতীত।
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It distinguishes between depictable attendant forms (parivāra/gaṇa imagery) and the Linga’s core teaching: Śiva as Pati is ultimately “lakṣya-lakṣaṇa-varjita,” beyond all objectifiable marks—so the Linga points to the transcendent, not merely a form.
Śiva-tattva is presented as Īśa who cannot be confined by defining features (lakṣaṇa) or reduced to an object of perception (lakṣya); forms may appear in His retinue, but His essential reality surpasses all limiting attributes.
The takeaway aligns with Pāśupata-oriented contemplation: while performing pūjā with forms and symbols, the sādhaka meditates on Śiva as the attributeless Pati, loosening pāśa (bondage) over the paśu (soul) through non-objectifying awareness.