क्रीडते सुचिरं कालं तस्मात्पुण्यजला शिवा गिरिं मेरुं नदी पुण्या सा प्रयाति प्रदक्षिणम्
krīḍate suciraṃ kālaṃ tasmātpuṇyajalā śivā giriṃ meruṃ nadī puṇyā sā prayāti pradakṣiṇam
അവൾ അവിടെ അതിദീർഘകാലം ക്രീഡിക്കുന്നു; അതുകൊണ്ട് പുണ്യജലങ്ങളാൽ പവിത്രമായ ആ ശുഭനദിയായ ‘ശിവാ’ മേരുപർവതത്തെ പ്രദക്ഷിണമായി ചുറ്റി ഒഴുകുന്നു।
Suta Goswami (narrating the tirtha-mahatmya to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames pradakṣiṇā (clockwise circumambulation) as a cosmic archetype: as the sacred river moves in reverent orbit around Meru, the devotee likewise circles the Liṅga, aligning the pashu (soul) toward Pati (Śiva) through ordered, auspicious movement.
Śiva-tattva is suggested as auspicious order and sanctifying presence: the river named “Śivā” becomes puṇya-jalā (merit-bearing), indicating that contact with Śiva’s sphere purifies pāśa (bondage) and turns existence toward harmony (dakṣiṇa/auspicious orientation).
Pradakṣiṇā is highlighted—externally as circumambulation of a sacred center, and internally (in Pāśupata-aligned practice) as repeatedly “turning” attention around the axis of Śiva, stabilizing devotion and dissolving distraction.