अध्याय 91: अरिष्ट-लक्षण, मृत्यु-संस्कार, पाशुपत-धारणा तथा ओङ्कार-उपासना
काकः कपोतो गृध्रो वा निलीयेद्यस्य मूर्धनि क्रव्यादो वा खगो यस्य षण्मासान् नातिवर्तते
kākaḥ kapoto gṛdhro vā nilīyedyasya mūrdhani kravyādo vā khago yasya ṣaṇmāsān nātivartate
Jika seekor gagak, merpati, atau burung nasar hinggap di kepala seseorang—atau burung pemakan daging terus berada dekatnya dan tidak pergi bahkan selama enam bulan—ini dinyatakan sebagai pertanda berat; paśu (jiwa terikat) mendekati akhir raga oleh daya pāśa (ikatan karma).
Suta Goswami
It frames death as a karmically conditioned transition for the pashu; the implied Shaiva response is to take refuge in Pati (Shiva) through linga-bhakti, japa, and purification, so the end of embodiment becomes spiritually meaningful rather than merely fearful.
By highlighting the pashu’s vulnerability to pasha (karmic necessity), it implicitly points to Shiva-tattva as Pati—the transcendent Lord who alone can loosen bondage and grant auspicious passage and liberation when approached with devotion and right practice.
No single rite is named, but the verse functions as an arishta indicator prompting remedial Shaiva disciplines—linga-puja, Rudra-japa, and Pashupata-oriented inner steadiness (vairagya and smarana of Shiva) to meet impending death with clarity.