एकार्णव-सृष्टिक्रमः, ब्रह्म-विष्णु-परस्परप्रवेशः, शिवस्य आगमनं च
वदति प्रियमत्यर्थं मन्युश्चास्य मया कृतः इत्येवं मनसा ध्यात्वा प्रत्युवाचेदमुत्तरम्
vadati priyamatyarthaṃ manyuścāsya mayā kṛtaḥ ityevaṃ manasā dhyātvā pratyuvācedamuttaram
“वदति प्रियमत्यर्थं, मन्युश्चास्य मया कृतः” इति मनसा ध्यात्वा प्रत्युवाचेदमुत्तरम्।
Suta Goswami (narrating the internal reflection of a character within the story)
It highlights inner purification—mastery over mind and anger—an essential prerequisite for Shiva-puja, where the devotee (pashu) approaches Pati with a शांत (pacified) inner state rather than reactive passion.
Indirectly, it points to Shiva-tattva as the standard of inner steadiness: the aspirant is urged to move from मन्यु (agitated mind) toward reflective restraint, aligning the pashu with the calm, witnessing consciousness associated with Pati.
A basic Pashupata-oriented discipline is implied: manasa-vicāra (inner reflection) and control of reactive emotions before speaking—supporting purity (śuddhi) that undergirds japa, dhyāna, and linga-sevā.