सर्वतीर्थस्य फलदां सर्वोपद्रवनाशिनीम् । कैलासशिखरासीनं देवदेवं जगद्गुरुम् । पंचवक्त्रं दशभुजं त्रिनेत्रं शूलपाणिनम्
sarvatīrthasya phaladāṃ sarvopadravanāśinīm | kailāsaśikharāsīnaṃ devadevaṃ jagadgurum | paṃcavaktraṃ daśabhujaṃ trinetraṃ śūlapāṇinam
(Ce récit sacré) confère le fruit de tous les tīrthas et anéantit toute calamité. (Il décrit) le Dieu des dieux, maître du monde, assis au sommet du Kailāsa : à cinq visages, dix bras, trois yeux, tenant le trident en sa main.
Vyāsa (narration/description)
Tirtha: Kailāsa
Type: peak
Listener: Pārtha/Yudhiṣṭhira
Scene: Śiva enthroned on the snowy summit of Kailāsa, immense and serene, five faces oriented to directions, ten arms holding divine weapons and symbols, three eyes luminous; the trident prominent; the scene radiates protective power as if dissolving calamities.
Devotional hearing and remembrance of Śiva’s presence grants tīrtha-like merit and removes obstacles (upadrava).
Kailāsa is explicitly invoked as Śiva’s seat; Dharmāraṇya-kathā is praised as equivalent to all tīrthas in merit.
No specific rite; the emphasis is on śravaṇa/smaraṇa (hearing/remembering) that yields sarva-tīrtha-phala.