Adhyaya 72 — Puradāha: Rudra’s Cosmic Chariot, Pāśupata-Vrata, and Brahmā’s Shiva-Stuti
शिव बुर्न्स् त्रिपुर अथ सज्यं धनुः कृत्वा शर्वः संधाय तं शरम् युक्त्वा पाशुपतास्त्रेण त्रिपुरं समचिन्तयत्
Śiva burns Tripura atha sajyaṃ dhanuḥ kṛtvā śarvaḥ saṃdhāya taṃ śaram yuktvā pāśupatāstreṇa tripuraṃ samacintayat
Entonces Śarva (Śiva), tras encordar su arco y colocar la flecha, la investió con el arma Pāśupata y fijó su resolución divina en Tripura—para que la ciudad triple quedara reducida a cenizas por Pati, el Señor que corta el pāśa (lazo) de los paśu (almas atadas).
Suta Goswami
It portrays Śiva as the supreme Pati whose focused will and divine power dissolve impurity and bondage; in Linga-worship this is contemplated as the Lord’s grace that burns the inner “Tripura” of ego, karma, and māyā.
Śiva is shown as sovereign and self-sufficient: by mere concentration and the Pāśupata power, he accomplishes cosmic dissolution—signifying the Lord’s icchā-śakti and his role as remover of pāśa for the paśu.
The key practice is dhyāna/ekāgratā (one-pointed contemplation): Śiva “fixes his intent” on Tripura, reflecting the Pāśupata emphasis on focused meditation empowered by mantra and divine śakti.