श्मशानं चापि संसारस्तद्वासी कृपयार्थिनाम् । भूतयः कथिता भूतिस्तां बिभर्ति स भूतिभृत्
śmaśānaṃ cāpi saṃsārastadvāsī kṛpayārthinām | bhūtayaḥ kathitā bhūtistāṃ bibharti sa bhūtibhṛt
Diese wandernde Welt des Saṃsāra ist selbst ein Verbrennungsplatz; dort weilt Er um derer willen, die um Erbarmen bitten. „Bhūti“ heißt, so sagt man, die Scharen der Wesen; Er trägt diese Bhūti — darum wird Er Bhūtibhṛt genannt, der Träger der Bhūti.
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta), deduced for Māheśvarakhaṇḍa narration
Tirtha: Śmaśāna (archetypal) / Bhūtapati-sthāna (conceptual)
Type: kshetra
Listener: Brāhmaṇa (bhāṣiṣṭha)
Scene: A cremation-ground that subtly morphs into the whole world: pyres become city lights, skulls become mountains, smoke becomes clouds. Śiva sits in compassionate stillness, ash-smeared, surrounded by bhūta-gaṇas who appear as redeemed attendants; a seeker approaches in sorrow and finds refuge.
Seeing saṃsāra as impermanent like a cremation-ground turns the mind toward Śiva, who grants refuge and compassion.
No named tīrtha appears; the verse uses the śmaśāna motif associated broadly with Śaiva sacred culture.
None directly; the verse explains the epithet Bhūtibhṛt through symbolic theology.