दारुवनलीला—नीललोहितपरीक्षा, ब्रह्मोपदेशः, अतिथिधर्मः, संन्यासक्रमः
गृहद्वारं गतो धीमांस् तामुवाच महामुनिः एह्येहि क्व गता भद्रे तमुवाचातिथिः स्वयम्
gṛhadvāraṃ gato dhīmāṃs tāmuvāca mahāmuniḥ ehyehi kva gatā bhadre tamuvācātithiḥ svayam
Reaching the doorway of the house, the wise great sage addressed her: “Come, come—where have you gone, auspicious one?” Then the Guest (Atithi), of his own accord, spoke to him.
Suta (narrating); within the verse: the Mahamuni addresses a woman, then the Atithi speaks
By placing the scene at the गृहद्वार (threshold) and introducing the अतिथि, the verse frames daily dharma—especially honoring a guest—as a practical extension of Shiva-puja, where service (seva) becomes worship offered to Pati (Shiva).
Shiva-tattva is implied through the Shaiva ethic that the divine is approached through right conduct: the wise sage’s welcoming call reflects purity and reverence, treating the encounter as spiritually consequential—an outer sign of inner alignment of the pashu toward Pati.
Atithi-seva (hospitality) is highlighted as a discipline of restraint and reverence—an applied form of sadhana consistent with Pashupata-oriented living, where ordinary actions are purified into offerings.