Adhyaya 72 — Puradāha: Rudra’s Cosmic Chariot, Pāśupata-Vrata, and Brahmā’s Shiva-Stuti
सुशोभमानो वरदः सम्प्रेक्ष्यैव च सारथिम् तस्मिन्नारोहति रथं कल्पितं लोकसंभृतम्
suśobhamāno varadaḥ samprekṣyaiva ca sārathim tasminnārohati rathaṃ kalpitaṃ lokasaṃbhṛtam
El Señor dador de dones, resplandeciente en gloria, con solo posar la mirada en el auriga, subió a aquel carro—místicamente forjado y sostenido por los mundos—manifestando la soberanía del Pati: su poder de asumir formas para proteger y elevar a los paśu (almas atadas).
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It highlights Shiva as Varada (bestower of grace): in Linga worship, the devotee seeks anugraha (liberating grace) from Pati, who can manifest and act within the cosmos while remaining transcendent.
Shiva appears as the sovereign Pati whose mere glance initiates action—showing effortless lordship (aiśvarya) and compassionate governance over the worlds that uphold his manifested form.
The verse points to anugraha as the core of Pashupata orientation: through devotion, japa, and inner surrender, the paśu becomes receptive to the Lord’s ‘glance’—the transforming descent of grace.