योगान्तरायाः, औपसर्गिकसिद्धयः, परवैराग्येन शैवप्रसादः
वार्त्ता तृतीया विप्रेन्द्रास् तुरीया चेह दर्शना आस्वादा पञ्चमी प्रोक्ता वेदना षष्ठिका स्मृता
vārttā tṛtīyā viprendrās turīyā ceha darśanā āsvādā pañcamī proktā vedanā ṣaṣṭhikā smṛtā
ഹേ വിപ്രേന്ദ്രന്മാരേ, മൂന്നാമത്തെ സിദ്ധി ‘വാർത്താ’—വാക്പ്രകാശം—എന്ന് പറയുന്നു. നാലാമത് ഇവിടെ ‘ദർശനം’; അഞ്ചാമത് ‘ആസ്വാദം’; ആറാമത് ‘വേദന’ (അനുഭൂതി) എന്ന് സ്മൃതം.
Suta Goswami (narrating the teaching within the Purva-Bhaga context)
It identifies speech and sensory functions as operative powers of the pashu; in Linga worship these are offered back to Pati (Shiva) through restraint, mantra, and inwardness so the mind becomes fit for Śiva-darśana.
By listing seeing, tasting, and sensation as conditioned functions, it implies Shiva-tattva as the transcendent Pati—beyond sensory fluctuation—while the bound soul experiences the world through these limited modalities.
Indriya-nigraha (sense-restraint) and disciplined speech—key supports for Pāśupata Yoga and for mantra-japa in Linga-pūjā, where vāk and the senses are purified and redirected toward Mahādeva.