दक्षयज्ञध्वंसः—वीरभद्रप्रेषणं, देवविष्ण्वोः पराजयः, पुनरनुग्रहः
यज्ञवाटस् तथा तस्य गङ्गाद्वारसमीपतः तद्देशे चैव विख्यातं शुभं कनखलं द्विजाः
yajñavāṭas tathā tasya gaṅgādvārasamīpataḥ taddeśe caiva vikhyātaṃ śubhaṃ kanakhalaṃ dvijāḥ
Malapit sa banal na Gaṅgādvāra ay naroon din ang Yajñavāṭa; at sa mismong lupain ding iyon, O mga dvija, tanyag ang mapalad na pook na tinatawag na Kanakhala.
Suta Goswami
It maps the sacred Shaiva landscape around Gaṅgādvāra—Yajñavāṭa and Kanakhala—implying that tīrtha-sevā and yajña performed in such Shiva-connected regions support purity of the pashu (soul) and readiness for Liṅga-upāsanā.
Indirectly: by highlighting auspicious tīrthas, it points to Pati (Śiva) as the sanctifier of space—where proximity to sacred geography becomes a means for loosening pāśa (bondage) through dharma, pilgrimage, and worship.
Yajña-oriented worship is suggested by “Yajñavāṭa,” indicating Vedic sacrificial rites and tīrtha-bathing near Gaṅgādvāra as supportive disciplines alongside Shaiva devotion (bhakti) and preparatory observances for deeper Pāśupata practice.