एकशृङ्गो महाशूलो गजशैलः पिशाचकः पञ्चशैलो ऽथ कैलासो हिमवांश्चाचलोत्तमः
ekaśṛṅgo mahāśūlo gajaśailaḥ piśācakaḥ pañcaśailo 'tha kailāso himavāṃścācalottamaḥ
Il est Ekśṛṅga, le Pic à une seule corne ; Mahāśūla, le Grand Trident ; Gajaśaila, la Montagne-Éléphant ; Piśācaka, Seigneur des Piśāca ; Pañcaśaila, la Montagne aux cinq sommets ; et aussi Kailāsa—Himavān, le suprême parmi les montagnes immobiles.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya; the verse functions as a Sahasranama-style litany of Shiva’s names)
It supplies Shiva’s nāmas that can be recited as mantra during liṅga-pūjā; the mountain-epithets emphasize the Liṅga as the steadfast axis (acala) where the paśu takes refuge in Pati to loosen pāsas.
Shiva is presented as the unshakable, supreme support—like Kailāsa and Himavān—while also transcending fearsome domains (piśācas), showing His sovereignty over all beings and states of existence.
Sahasranāma/nāma-japa as a limb of devotion supportive of Pāśupata-oriented sādhanā—steady remembrance of Pati (Śiva) to stabilize the mind and weaken bondage (pāśa).