एकवृक्षश्च वृक्षेषु करालवदनो निशि । घण्टारवो गुहावासी पद्मखंजो जले स्थितः
ekavṛkṣaśca vṛkṣeṣu karālavadano niśi | ghaṇṭāravo guhāvāsī padmakhaṃjo jale sthitaḥ
वृक्षों में वह ‘एकवृक्ष’ है; रात्रि में ‘करालवदन’ है। गुहाओं में ‘घण्टारव’ और जल में ‘पद्मखंज’ रूप से स्थित रहता है।
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta), narrating to the sages (deduced from Māheśvarakhaṇḍa context)
Tirtha: Guhā (cave) / Jala-tīrtha (waters) / Vṛkṣa-sthala (sacred tree spot)
Type: kund
Scene: A continuous landscape: a solitary sacred tree (Ekavṛkṣa) glowing; a night scene with Karālavadana looming yet protective; a cave mouth resonating like a bell (Ghaṇṭārava); and lotus-filled waters where Padmakhaṃja stands amid blooms.
Every landscape of pilgrimage—tree-groves, night paths, caves, and waters—has sanctified protection within Śaiva dharma.
The verse is typological (by habitat) rather than naming one tirtha; it supports sacred travel through varied terrains.
Place-based remembrance of the guardian-name when entering groves, traveling at night, visiting caves, or approaching water.