अध्याय ९६: शरभ-प्रादुर्भावः, नृसिंह-दर्पशमनम्, विष्णोः शिवस्तुतिः, फलश्रुति
अथ विभ्रम्य पक्षाभ्यां नाभिपादे ऽभ्युदारयन् पादावाबध्य पुच्छेन बाहुभ्यां बाहुमण्डलम्
atha vibhramya pakṣābhyāṃ nābhipāde 'bhyudārayan pādāvābadhya pucchena bāhubhyāṃ bāhumaṇḍalam
ついでそれは翼を激しく打ち鳴らし、臍と足を打った。尾で足を縛り、前肢で両腕の輪を掴み—力によって相手をねじ伏せた。
Suta Goswami
The verse uses a vivid subjugation scene to imply the Shaiva principle that all powers are ultimately mastered under Pati (Shiva); Linga worship trains the devotee (pashu) to surrender ego-force and align with Shiva’s sovereign order.
Though Shiva is not directly acting in the verse, the narrative logic reflects Shiva-tattva as the supreme controller: worldly force and conflict are contained within His governance, reminding the pashu that liberation arises by turning from pasha (bondage) to Pati.
It indirectly points to Pashupata discipline—sense-restraint and mastery over bodily impulses—where the practitioner binds the wandering faculties and steadies the “limbs” of action toward Shiva-centered awareness.