एवमुक्त्वा महादेवो वृषमारोप्य तां प्रियाम् । स्वयमारुह्य पश्चाच्च कैलासं पर्वतं गतः
evamuktvā mahādevo vṛṣamāropya tāṃ priyām | svayamāruhya paścācca kailāsaṃ parvataṃ gataḥ
So sprach Mahādeva; dann setzte Er Seine Geliebte auf den heiligen Stier. Darauf stieg Er selbst auf und zog zum Berge Kailāsa.
Narrator (contextual; likely Śāṇḍilya continuing the account)
Tirtha: Kailāsa
Type: peak
Scene: Mahādeva places Pārvatī upon the bull (Nandin), mounts behind, and departs toward snow-clad Kailāsa under a vast sky.
The verse closes a teaching moment and re-centers the narrative in Śaiva sacred geography, with Kailāsa as the archetypal divine abode.
Mount Kailāsa is referenced as Śiva’s sacred abode (a supreme pilgrimage ideal in Purāṇic imagination).
No explicit ritual is prescribed here; it is a narrative transition.