Adhyaya 33: Pashupata Conduct, Bhasma-Vrata, and Shiva’s Boon to the Sages
सस्मितं प्राह सम्प्रेक्ष्य सर्वान्मुनिवरांस्तदा
sasmitaṃ prāha samprekṣya sarvānmunivarāṃstadā
Alors, après avoir posé son regard sur tous ces sages éminents, il parla avec un doux sourire—signe d’un enseignement gracieux du Seigneur (Pati) envers les âmes liées (paśu) qui aspirent à se délivrer du lien (pāśa).
Suta Goswami (narrating; the smiling speaker in the scene is the principal teacher-figure of the chapter as implied by context)
It frames the teaching moment: the guru-like speaker addresses the sages with calm grace, a typical prelude to transmitting Linga-centered upadeśa and dharma.
By implication it reflects Pati’s anugraha (grace): the compassionate, serene authority that instructs paśus and loosens pāśa through right knowledge and devotion.
No specific rite is stated in this line; it functions as a narrative cue that a Shaiva instruction sequence (often linked with puja-vidhi or Pashupata-oriented discipline) is about to begin.