महिमा शेषपूज्यत्वात्प्राप्तिर्नाप्राप्यमस्य यत् । प्राकाम्यमस्य व्यापित्वादीशित्वं चेश्वरो यतः
mahimā śeṣapūjyatvātprāptirnāprāpyamasya yat | prākāmyamasya vyāpitvādīśitvaṃ ceśvaro yataḥ
Mahimā is so called because one becomes worthy of reverence by all others; prāpti is that state in which nothing remains unattainable. Prākāmya belongs to one who pervades all; and īśitva is his, because he is truly the Lord.
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta)
Scene: A serene yogin in a Śaiva setting, haloed by subtle cosmic motifs indicating pervasion and lordship; the siddhis appear as symbolic emblems (lotus, conch-like aura, expanding mandala).
It ties yogic powers to divine-like qualities—reverence, omnipresence, and lordship—grounded in the reality of Īśvara.
No site is named; the verse is a conceptual gloss on siddhis and Īśvara-nature.
None; it provides definitions rather than ritual instruction.