नन्दिकेश्वरोत्पत्तिः — Nandikesvara’s Origin, Shiva’s Boons, and the Rise of Sacred Rivers
त्र्यक्षं दशभुजं शान्तं पञ्चवक्त्रं सदाशिवम् सरितश्चान्तरे पुण्ये स्थितं मां परमेश्वरः
tryakṣaṃ daśabhujaṃ śāntaṃ pañcavaktraṃ sadāśivam saritaścāntare puṇye sthitaṃ māṃ parameśvaraḥ
Contemplei o Senhor Supremo (Parameśvara) de pé no espaço sagrado entre os rios—Sadāśiva: de três olhos, dez braços, sereno e de cinco faces—permanecendo como o Pati transcendente que aquieta os laços do paśu.
Suta Goswami (narrating an internal vision/account within the Purva-Bhaga narrative)
It frames Shiva as Sadāśiva—the transcendent Pati—whose serene, multi-faced form is the theological basis for worshipping the Liṅga as the formless presence revealed through sacred tīrthas.
Shiva-tattva is shown as simultaneously immanent and transcendent: standing in a holy “in-between” space, yet revealed with five faces (pañcavaktra) and three eyes (tryakṣa), indicating omniscience and sovereign grace over pāśa (bondage).
Tīrtha-sevana and darśana: seeking Shiva’s presence at sacred river-spaces, cultivating śānti (inner stillness) aligned with Pāśupata orientation toward the Pati who liberates the paśu.