Adhyaya 63: Daksha’s Progeny, Kashyapa’s Offspring, and the Rishi-Vamshas that Sustain the Worlds
अर्धावशिष्टे तस्मिंस्तु द्वापरे सम्प्रवर्तिते मानवस्य नरिष्यन्तः पुत्र आसीद् दमः किल
ardhāvaśiṣṭe tasmiṃstu dvāpare sampravartite mānavasya nariṣyantaḥ putra āsīd damaḥ kila
When the Dvāpara age had begun and was yet only half-spent, Manu’s son Nariṣyanta is said to have had a son named Dama. Thus the royal line continued in dharma, under the unseen governance of Pati (Śiva) who orders the cycles of time.
Suta Goswami
It situates sacred history within yuga-time, implying that worldly lineages unfold under Pati’s (Śiva’s) cosmic order—the same order honored through Linga-pūjā.
Though Śiva is not named, the verse reflects Śiva-tattva as Pati: the transcendent regulator of kāla (time) and dharma through which the destinies of pashus (souls) and kingdoms proceed.
No specific pūjā-vidhi or Pāśupata-yoga technique is stated; the takeaway is yuga-awareness (kāla-jñāna) as a framework for dharmic living aligned with Śiva as Pati.