गता गणाश्च सर्वत्र भूतप्रेता दिशो दश । विसंज्ञं च स्वमात्मानं ज्ञात्वा देवो महेश्वरः
gatā gaṇāśca sarvatra bhūtapretā diśo daśa | visaṃjñaṃ ca svamātmānaṃ jñātvā devo maheśvaraḥ
When the gaṇas had dispersed everywhere, and hosts of spirits and departed beings had spread through the ten directions, the Lord Mahādeva, realizing that his own being had fallen into unconsciousness, then acted accordingly.
Deductive: a Purāṇic narrator addressing a king (implied by subsequent 'rājan/nṛpa/mahārāja')
Tirtha: Dharmāraṇya (implied)
Type: kshetra
Scene: A vast forest-kṣetra under a darkened sky; gaṇas dispersing in all directions while bhūtas and pretas stream through the ten quarters; Mahādeva stands momentarily still, sensing his own lapse into unconsciousness—an awe-filled pause before action.
Even divine narratives depict crisis and recovery, pointing to Śiva’s lordship over beings of all realms and the unfolding of sacred purpose in a tīrtha’s story.
The broader context is Dharmāraṇya (the sacred forest) whose māhātmya is being narrated in this chapter.
No direct ritual is prescribed in this verse; it sets the narrative scene for later tīrtha-phalā (merit descriptions).