Adhyaya 72 — Puradāha: Rudra’s Cosmic Chariot, Pāśupata-Vrata, and Brahmā’s Shiva-Stuti
त्रिधा संवृत्य लोकान्वै प्रसुप्तभुजगात्मने त्रिप्रकारं स्थितायैव त्रेताग्निमयरूपिणे
tridhā saṃvṛtya lokānvai prasuptabhujagātmane triprakāraṃ sthitāyaiva tretāgnimayarūpiṇe
Salutación a Aquel que, de triple modo, envuelve los mundos; cuya propia Esencia es la Serpiente que reposa en el sueño del yoga; que permanece como el principio triple; y que asume la forma de la Tretā, la tríada de fuegos sagrados.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya; hymn-style attribution inferred)
It frames Shiva as the cosmic Pati who pervades and “enfolds” all worlds in a threefold way, while also being present as the Vedic fire-triad—supporting Linga-puja as both inner worship (yogic) and outer worship (agni/ritual).
Shiva-tattva is presented as tri-functional and all-pervading: He sustains the cosmos, remains established as a threefold principle, and yet is the transcendent ground behind forms—symbolized by the serpent-like yogic repose and the fire-form of sacrificial presence.
Ritually, it points to honoring Shiva through the three sacred fires (tretāgni) and Agni-centered Vedic worship; yogically, it hints at inner stillness (yogic “sleep”) and the awakening of the inner fire as part of Pashupata-aligned contemplation.