श्वेतमुनिना कालस्य निग्रहः (मृत्युञ्जय-भक्ति-प्रसादः)
एह्येहि श्वेत चानेन विधिना किं फलं तव रुद्रो वा भगवान् विष्णुर् ब्रह्मा वा जगदीश्वरः
ehyehi śveta cānena vidhinā kiṃ phalaṃ tava rudro vā bhagavān viṣṇur brahmā vā jagadīśvaraḥ
«Ven, ven, oh Śveta. Al realizar este rito según la norma prescrita, ¿qué fruto buscas? ¿Es Rudra (Śiva), el Señor Bienaventurado, o Viṣṇu, o Brahmā, el Señor de los mundos?»
Suta (narrating an internal dialogue; the immediate speaker addresses Śveta)
It frames worship as intentional and method-based (vidhi), asking the seeker to clarify the intended fruit (phala) and the chosen supreme refuge—preparing the ground for Shaiva understanding that the highest fruit culminates in Pati (Śiva).
By listing Rudra alongside Viṣṇu and Brahmā while calling the goal “Jagadīśvara,” it points toward the question of ultimate lordship; in Shaiva Siddhānta terms, the highest Jagadīśvara is Pati (Śiva), distinct from bound souls (paśu) and bonds (pāśa).
It emphasizes vidhi—correct observance of worship/discipline—suggesting that ritual (pūjā-vidhi) and inner orientation (the sought phala) must align, a key prerequisite for Pāśupata-style sādhanā aimed at release from pāśa.