स्वेच्छाविग्रहसंभव-प्रतिष्ठाफलवर्णनम् (विविधशिवमूर्तिप्रतिष्ठा, लोक-फल, शिवसायुज्य)
मेरुमासाद्य देवानां भवनेषु प्रमोदते एकपादं चतुर्बाहुं त्रिनेत्रं शूलसंयुतम्
merumāsādya devānāṃ bhavaneṣu pramodate ekapādaṃ caturbāhuṃ trinetraṃ śūlasaṃyutam
Having reached Mount Meru, he delights in the divine abodes of the gods—manifest as the One-footed Lord, four-armed, three-eyed, and bearing the trident. In this vision the Pati (Śiva), free and sovereign, reveals his awe-inspiring form, before whom the paśus (bound souls) remember their dependence and turn toward liberation.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
The verse emphasizes darśana (direct contemplation) of Śiva’s iconic marks—trinetra and śūla—supporting linga-upāsanā by fixing the mind on Pati’s sovereignty, which loosens pasha (bondage) for the pashu (soul).
Śiva-tattva is shown as transcendent yet manifest: the One-footed (Ekapāda) form signals unmatched stability and supremacy, while the three eyes and trident indicate omniscient governance over creation, preservation, and dissolution.
A dhyāna-based practice is implied: meditate on Śiva as Ekapāda, trinetra, and śūla-dhara—an inner Pāśupata orientation where the pashu turns toward Pati through focused remembrance rather than mere external action.