भुवनकोशस्वभाववर्णनम् — सप्तद्वीप-पर्वत-लोकविन्यासः तथा यक्ष-उमा-प्रकाशः
चित्रैर्मणिमयैः कूटैः शिलाजालैः समुच्छ्रितैः द्वीपस्य तस्य पूर्वार्धे चित्रसानुस्थितो महान्
citrairmaṇimayaiḥ kūṭaiḥ śilājālaiḥ samucchritaiḥ dvīpasya tasya pūrvārdhe citrasānusthito mahān
Adorned with variegated, gem-like peaks and lofty lattices of stone rising high, in the eastern half of that island there stood a magnificent great mountain with wondrous slopes—an auspicious, ordered realm fit for the Lord Pati, where the paśu may turn from pāśa toward Śiva through sacred vision and discipline.
Suta Goswami
By portraying an elevated, jewel-like sacred landscape, the verse frames the cosmos as Shiva’s ordered field where worship and darshana become purifying—preparing the paśu (soul) to approach the Linga as Pati, the supreme refuge.
Shiva-tattva is implied as the principle of auspicious order and transcendental splendor: the world’s most refined beauty and stability point back to Pati, the ground of all manifestation beyond pāśa (bondage).
The verse chiefly supports tīrtha-darśana and contemplative visualization (bhāvana): seeing sacred order in creation as a Pāśupata aid for loosening attachment and turning the mind toward Shiva.