दारुवनलीला—नीललोहितपरीक्षा, ब्रह्मोपदेशः, अतिथिधर्मः, संन्यासक्रमः
संप्रोक्ष्य नारीवृन्दं वै मुहुर्मुहुरनङ्गहा अनङ्गवृद्धिम् अकरोद् अतीव मधुराकृतिः
saṃprokṣya nārīvṛndaṃ vai muhurmuhuranaṅgahā anaṅgavṛddhim akarod atīva madhurākṛtiḥ
Anaṅga (Kāma), setelah berulang kali memercikkan (atau menyapukan) ke atas kumpulan wanita, dengan rupa yang amat manis dan memikat, membuat daya keinginan berahi membesar dan semakin menguat.
Suta Goswami
It highlights kāma (desire) as a pasha (bondage) that can agitate embodied beings (pashus); Linga worship centers the mind on Pati (Shiva), the one who transcends and regulates such impulses.
By foregrounding Anaṅga’s power to inflame desire, the narrative implicitly contrasts it with Shiva-tattva: Shiva as Pati remains the sovereign beyond sensory compulsion, the inner ruler before whom kāma is ultimately subdued.
The verse points to the need for indriya-nigraha (sense-restraint) central to Pāśupata-oriented discipline—channeling desire through mantra, dhyāna, and Linga-upāsanā rather than being driven by it.