अन्धक-हिरण्याक्ष-प्रसङ्गः, वराहावतारः, दंष्ट्राभूषणं च
त्वयोद्धृता देव धरा धरेश धराधराकार धृताग्रदंष्ट्रे धराधरैः सर्वजनैः समुद्रैः सुरासुरैः सेवितचन्द्रवक्त्र
tvayoddhṛtā deva dharā dhareśa dharādharākāra dhṛtāgradaṃṣṭre dharādharaiḥ sarvajanaiḥ samudraiḥ surāsuraiḥ sevitacandravaktra
Ô Deva, ô Seigneur qui soutiens la Terre ! Par toi la Terre fut relevée : toi qui pris la forme du grand porteur de montagnes, la Terre dressée sur la pointe de ta défense. Tu es adoré par les seigneurs des montagnes, par tous les êtres, par les océans, et par les Deva comme par les Asura—ô Śiva, dont le visage rayonne comme la lune.
Suta Goswami (narrating a hymn of praise within the Varaha/Earth-uplift context)
It frames Shiva as Pati—the supreme protector who rescues and sustains the world—so Linga worship here is devotion to the sustaining, world-uplifting Lord rather than merely a symbolic form.
Shiva-tattva is shown as sovereign support (dhareśa) and compassionate deliverer: the One revered by all realms—mountains, oceans, Devas and Asuras—who bears the cosmos and restores dharma.
Stuti (praise) is implied as a key limb of Shiva-puja; yogically, it supports Pashupata-bhāva—turning the Pashu (individual soul) toward Pati through reverent remembrance of His saving acts.