Bhūtavana–Kailāsa–Mandākinī–Rudrapurī: Śiva’s Jeweled Abodes and Perpetual Worship
जांबूनदमयैः पद्मैर् गन्धस्पर्शगुणान्वितैः नीलवैडूर्यपत्रैश् च गन्धोपेतैर्महोत्पलैः
jāṃbūnadamayaiḥ padmair gandhasparśaguṇānvitaiḥ nīlavaiḍūryapatraiś ca gandhopetairmahotpalaiḥ
Mit Lotosblüten aus Jāmbūnada-Gold, erfüllt von Duft und wohltuender Berührung; mit Blättern wie blaues Vaidūrya-Gestein; und mit großen, von Wohlgeruch durchdrungenen Utpala (wird die Verehrung vollzogen). Solche Vollkommenheit wird Pati dargebracht, dem Herrn, der die Fesseln der paśu löst.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It emphasizes offering the finest, pure, and fragrant substances—golden lotuses and gem-like petals—as a form of refined archana, where beauty and purity are directed to Shiva (Pati) to sanctify the worshipper (paśu).
By implying that the highest-quality offerings are oriented to Him, the verse presents Shiva as Pati—the supreme recipient of worship—whose grace transforms sensory qualities (gandha, sparśa) into means of purification and release from pāśa (bondage).
Puja-vidhi through sensory sanctification: using fragrance and touch (gandha-sparśa) in offerings as disciplined devotion, aligning the senses toward Shiva—supportive of Pāśupata-oriented inner purification.