गिरींद्रजागिरं श्रुत्वा गिरीश इति तत्त्ववित् । हित्वा हिमगिरिं प्राप्तो निजमानंदकाननम्
girīṃdrajāgiraṃ śrutvā girīśa iti tattvavit | hitvā himagiriṃ prāpto nijamānaṃdakānanam
Hearing the summons of the Lord of mountains, the Knower of truth—Śiva, Lord of the mountains—left the Himālaya and came to His own grove of bliss, Ānandavana (Kāśī).
Skanda (deduced for Kāśīkhaṇḍa narration)
Tirtha: Ānandavana (within Kāśī/Avimukta)
Type: kshetra
Scene: Śiva, the mountain-lord, hearing a divine summons, turns from the snowy Himālaya and journeys toward Kāśī’s Ānandavana—lush, radiant, filled with sacred trees and subtle liṅga-presence—signaling a cosmic ‘homecoming’ into the city of liberation.
Kāśī (Ānandavana) is portrayed as Śiva’s own chosen abode, the natural seat of divine bliss and liberation.
Ānandavana—identified with the Kāśī-kṣetra (Vārāṇasī sacred region).
None explicitly; the verse focuses on Śiva’s movement to and residence in the sacred field.