तत्र गत्वा प्रहृष्टा त्माकृत्वा रम्यं महेश्वरम् । गीतनृत्यसवाद्यैश्च रात्रिजागरणादिभिः । चकार पूर्ववद्राज्यं समंताद्धतकंटकम्
tatra gatvā prahṛṣṭā tmākṛtvā ramyaṃ maheśvaram | gītanṛtyasavādyaiśca rātrijāgaraṇādibhiḥ | cakāra pūrvavadrājyaṃ samaṃtāddhatakaṃṭakam
そこへ赴き、心より歓喜して、マヘーシュヴァラ(シヴァ)の麗しき聖所を建立し、礼拝した。歌と舞、器楽、そして夜通しの覚醒行などの修行によって、彼は国を昔のごとくに整え、四方の「棘」(患い)をことごとく除いた。
Narrator (third-person)
Tirtha: Mahēśvara (Śiva) shrine established/worshipped by the king (name of kṣetra not specified)
Type: temple
Listener: Ṛṣis (frame; not explicit here)
Scene: The king arrives joyfully and establishes/worships a beautiful Maheśvara shrine; the night is alive with lamps, singing, dancing, and instruments as devotees keep vigil; afterward the kingdom becomes ‘thornless’—peaceful and secure.
Devotion to Śiva expressed through worship, music, and vigil supports both spiritual uplift and worldly stability.
The verse says “there” without naming the place; it implies a tīrtha setting within Nāgarakhaṇḍa’s Tīrthamāhātmya narrative.
Rātri-jāgaraṇa (night vigil) along with gīta-nṛtya-vādya (devotional singing, dance, and music) in honor of Maheśvara.