ययातिना पूरौ राज्याभिषेकः, दिक्प्रदानं, तृष्णा-वैराग्योपदेशः, वनप्रवेशः च
वरदानेन शुक्रस्य न शक्यं कर्तुमन्यथा ययाति दिस्त्रिबुतेस् थे किन्ग्दोम् सूत उवाच एवं जानपदैस्तुष्टैर् इत्युक्तो नाहुषस्तदा
varadānena śukrasya na śakyaṃ kartumanyathā Yayāti distributes the kingdom sūta uvāca evaṃ jānapadaistuṣṭair ityukto nāhuṣastadā
由于舒克罗所赐之恩福,此事不可能另作他法。于是雅雅提分配了国土。苏多说道:当国中百姓心满意足并如此陈言之时,那胡沙便在当下作了回应。在湿婆之见中,即便王权亦为既定之赐福与业缚之索(pāśa)所系;唯有主宰 Pati——湿婆,才具真实的至上主权。
Suta (Sūta Gosvāmin) narrating to the sages of Naimiṣāraṇya
It frames worldly authority as constrained by vara (boon) and karma—reminding the devotee that only Pati (Śiva) is truly independent; Linga worship turns the mind from contingent power to the Absolute.
By contrast: humans, even kings, cannot act ‘otherwise’ due to pāśa (bondage), while Śiva-tattva as Pati is svatantra (fully free) and the ultimate ground beyond karmic compulsion.
No explicit ritual is stated; the implied takeaway is vairāgya and dharma-aligned action—supporting a Shaiva discipline where the pashu recognizes bondage and seeks liberation through devotion and inner restraint.