Adhyaya 72 — Puradāha: Rudra’s Cosmic Chariot, Pāśupata-Vrata, and Brahmā’s Shiva-Stuti
शैलेन्द्रः कार्मुकं चैव ज्या भुजङ्गाधिपः स्वयम् कालरात्र्या तथैवेह तथेन्द्रधनुषा पुनः
śailendraḥ kārmukaṃ caiva jyā bhujaṅgādhipaḥ svayam kālarātryā tathaiveha tathendradhanuṣā punaḥ
Dito, ang Śailendra ang mismong busog; ang pisi ng busog ay ang panginoon ng mga ahas mismo. Gayundin, naririto ang Kālarātrī; at muli, ang bahaghari ni Indra ang busog. Sa mga banal na pagsasakatawang ito nauunawaan ang kapangyarihan ng Pati—ang Kataas-taasang Śiva—na pati sandata at lakas ng panahon ay nagiging kasangkapan sa Kanyang kamay.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purva-Bhaga to the sages; verse embedded in a descriptive-stuti of divine forces/ayudhas)
It trains the devotee to perceive all cosmic powers—mountain, serpent-force, Time (Kālarātrī), and the rainbow of Indra—as subordinate manifestations serving Pati (Shiva). This supports Linga-puja as worship of the One who holds and transcends all forces.
Shiva-tattva is implied as the sovereign principle in which even destructive Time-power (Kālarātrī) and protective or celestial forces (Indra’s rainbow) become functional expressions—showing Pati as the controller of pasha-like forces that bind or liberate pashus.
A contemplative stuti (bhāvanā) aligned with Pāśupata insight: during japa or Linga-dhyāna, the sādhaka internalizes that all energies and instruments are Shiva’s—reducing pasha (bondage) by dissolving the sense of separate agency.