Adhyaya 35 — दधीचि-क्षुप-युद्धम्, भार्गवोपदेशः, मृतसंजीवनी (त्र्यम्बक) मन्त्रः
योगादेत्य दधीचस्य देहं देहभृतांवरः संधाय पूर्ववद्देहं दधीचस्याह भार्गवः
yogādetya dadhīcasya dehaṃ dehabhṛtāṃvaraḥ saṃdhāya pūrvavaddehaṃ dadhīcasyāha bhārgavaḥ
Durch die Kraft des Yoga trat Bhārgava—der Vornehmste unter den Verkörperten—an Dadhīcis Leib heran und fügte ihn wieder zusammen, sodass Dadhīcis Gestalt genau wie zuvor wiederhergestellt wurde.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Bhargava–Dadhichi episode)
It highlights yoga-siddhi as a fruit of Shaiva discipline—implying that steadfast devotion to Pati (Shiva) and Shaiva tapas can culminate in extraordinary mastery over the embodied condition (pāśa-bound life).
Indirectly, it points to Shiva-tattva as the ground of transformative power: yogic restoration signifies mastery over māyā and embodiment, capacities ultimately rooted in Pati, the Lord who transcends and governs body and prāṇa.
Yoga as siddhi-bearing practice—specifically the ability to approach, reconstitute, or reanimate the body through concentrated yogic power, consistent with Pāśupata-oriented ascetic attainment.