Shiva’s Wedding Procession to Kailasa and the Marriage of Girija (Kali)
एवं क्रीडां हरः कृत्वा समं च गिरिकन्यया आगच्छद् दक्षिणां वेदिमृषिभिः सेवितां दृढाम्
evaṃ krīḍāṃ haraḥ kṛtvā samaṃ ca girikanyayā āgacchad dakṣiṇāṃ vedimṛṣibhiḥ sevitāṃ dṛḍhām
Ainsi, après avoir accompli son jeu divin, Hara, avec la Fille de la Montagne, parvint à la plate-forme d’autel du sud (vedī), ferme et bien établie, desservie par les sages.
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Divine līlā is not opposed to Vedic order: after playful intimacy, Śiva and Pārvatī move toward a consecrated, sage-attended ritual space, suggesting that dharma and sanctity frame and stabilize even divine play.
This is best classed under ākhyāna / dharma-anuśaṅga within 'Vamśānucarita' or allied narrative sections rather than core cosmogenesis; it is episodic narration tied to sacred/ritual setting and ṛṣi participation.
The 'dakṣiṇā vedī' and the presence of ṛṣis symbolize the anchoring of divine power in yajña-space and tradition; the couple’s approach can signify the integration of śakti (Girikanyā) with īśvara (Hara) in a ritually affirmed cosmos.