ध्यानयज्ञः, संसार-विष-निरूपणम्, पाशुपतयोगः, परा-अपरा विद्या, चतुर्वस्था-विचारः (अध्यायः ८६)
किमनेन द्विजश्रेष्ठा विषं वक्ष्ये सुदारुणम् संहरेत्तद्विषं यस्तु स समर्थो ह्यनेन किम्
kimanena dvijaśreṣṭhā viṣaṃ vakṣye sudāruṇam saṃharettadviṣaṃ yastu sa samartho hyanena kim
«ສິ່ງນີ້ຈະມີປະໂຫຍດອັນໃດ, ໂອ ຜູ້ປະເສີດໃນພວກທະວິຊະ? ຂ້ອຍຈະກ່າວເຖິງພິດອັນນ່າສະພຶງກົວຢ່າງຍິ່ງ. ຜູ້ໃດສາມາດກໍາຈັດແລະທໍາລາຍພິດນັ້ນໄດ້ແທ້ ຜູ້ນັ້ນເທົ່ານັ້ນຈຶ່ງເປັນຜູ້ມີພະລັງ; ຈະຕ້ອງການສິ່ງອື່ນອີກຫຍັງ?»
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya)
It frames Shiva (Pati) as the only truly competent remover of “poison”—both literal calamity and the inner toxins of pāśa (bondage). Linga-worship is presented as taking refuge in that singular power of dissolution and protection.
Shiva-tattva is implied as svatantra-śakti (independent sovereignty): the one who can annihilate the root poison itself. Such competence marks Pati as beyond ordinary aids, since all supports become secondary when the source-remover is present.
The takeaway aligns with Pāśupata orientation: identify the “viṣa” as doṣa and bondage in the pashu, and seek its saṃhāra through Shiva-upāsanā—Linga-pūjā, mantra-japa, and inner renunciation aimed at dissolving pāśa.