ययातिना पूरौ राज्याभिषेकः, दिक्प्रदानं, तृष्णा-वैराग्योपदेशः, वनप्रवेशः च
शुक्रेण च वरो दत्तः काव्येनोशनसा स्वयम् पुत्रो यस्त्वनुवर्तेत स ते राज्यधरस्त्विति
śukreṇa ca varo dattaḥ kāvyenośanasā svayam putro yastvanuvarteta sa te rājyadharastviti
ហើយសុក្ររៈ—កាវ្យ ឧសនសា ផ្ទាល់—បានប្រទានពរ៖ «កូនប្រុសណាដែលស្មោះត្រង់តាមធម៌ និងព្រះបន្ទូលរបស់អ្នក គាត់នោះនឹងជាអ្នកទ្រទ្រង់រាជ្យរបស់អ្នក»។
Suta Goswami (narrating an internal account involving Shukra/Ushanas)
It frames kingship as dharma-based stewardship: the ruler must uphold order so that subjects (pashu) can live dharmically and pursue Shiva-oriented worship without obstruction—an indirect support of Linga-puja through righteous governance.
Shiva-tattva is implied through the Shaiva ethic that all authority is ultimately derivative: a kingdom is sustained when aligned with dharma, which in Shaiva Siddhanta culminates in devotion to Pati (Shiva), the supreme upholder beyond worldly rulers.
No specific ritual is prescribed; the takeaway is ethical discipline (dharma-anusarana) as a foundational limb supporting Shaiva sadhana, including Pashupata-oriented self-restraint and obedience to guru and scriptural injunctions.