देवैर्विष्णोः शरणागमनम्—शिवलिङ्गस्थापनं, शिवसहस्रनामस्तवः, सुदर्शनचक्रप्रदानं च
दाता दयाकरो दक्षः कपर्दी कामशासनः श्मशाननिलयः सूक्ष्मः श्मशानस्थो महेश्वरः
dātā dayākaro dakṣaḥ kapardī kāmaśāsanaḥ śmaśānanilayaḥ sūkṣmaḥ śmaśānastho maheśvaraḥ
He is the Giver, compassion embodied, and the supremely capable One; Kapardī, wearer of matted locks; the Chastiser of Kāma (desire); He whose abode is the cremation-ground; the Subtle One; He who abides in the cremation-ground—Maheshvara, Mahādeva, the Great Lord (Pati) of all.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva Sahasranama to the sages at Naimisharanya)
It presents key nāmas of Shiva that guide Linga-upāsanā: the devotee approaches the Linga knowing Shiva as the compassionate Bestower and as the transcendental Lord who turns the mind away from attachment (kāma) toward liberation.
Shiva is shown as Pati (Maheshvara)—both immanent (dwelling even in the śmaśāna, the realm of endings) and transcendent (sūkṣma, subtle beyond sense). He governs desire (Kāmaśāsana) and grants grace (Dayākara) that loosens Pāśa (bondage) upon the Paśu (soul).
The śmaśāna imagery points to Pāśupata-style vairāgya and inner renunciation—meditating on impermanence to conquer kāma—while reciting Shiva’s names as japa alongside Linga-pūjā.