Bhūtavana–Kailāsa–Mandākinī–Rudrapurī: Śiva’s Jeweled Abodes and Perpetual Worship
पुष्पोडुपवहाभिश् च स्रवन्तीभिर् अलंकृते स्निग्धवर्णं महामूलम् अनेकस्कन्धपादपम्
puṣpoḍupavahābhiś ca sravantībhir alaṃkṛte snigdhavarṇaṃ mahāmūlam anekaskandhapādapam
Geschmückt von fließenden Bächen, die Blumen und Lotosknospen trugen, stand dort ein großer Baum: von glänzender Farbe, tief verwurzelt, in viele Stämme und Äste ausgreifend—gleich einer heiligen Stütze des Herrn Pati (Śiva) inmitten der geschaffenen Welt.
Suta Goswami
It frames the worship-setting as inherently consecrated: flowing waters and flower-bearing currents beautify the place, indicating a naturally pure kṣetra suitable for approaching the Linga as Pati.
By portraying a radiant, deep-rooted, many-branched support within the world, it hints at Shiva as Pati—unshaken foundation and inner sustainer—while creation’s beauty (streams, flowers) becomes a sign of His immanent grace.
The verse implicitly supports puṣpa-arcana (flower-offering) and tīrtha/āpaḥ-śauca (purification through sacred waters), preparatory to Linga-pūjā and contemplative Pāśupata orientation toward Pati.