Genealogies of Kaśyapa and Pulastya; Rise of Brahmavādin Lines and Rākṣasa Branches
स तासु जनयामास स्वस्त्यात्रेयान् महौजसः / वेदवेदाङ्गनिरतांस्तपसा हतकिल्बिषान्
sa tāsu janayāmāsa svastyātreyān mahaujasaḥ / vedavedāṅganiratāṃstapasā hatakilbiṣān
ومن أولئك الزوجات أنجب أبناءَ سْفَسْتْيَاتْرِيَة، ذوي بأسٍ روحيٍّ عظيم؛ مواظبين على الفيدا وعلومها المساندة (فيدأنغا)، وقد طهّرتهم التقشّفات من الآثام.
Sūta (narrator) recounting Purāṇic genealogy to the sages
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Indirectly: it emphasizes inner purification (sin removed by tapas) and Vedic discipline as prerequisites for higher realization—conditions traditionally linked to steady knowledge of the Self.
Tapas (austerity/ascetic discipline) is foregrounded as a yogic purifier, paired with sustained engagement in śruti (Veda) and śāstra-support (Vedāṅgas), aligning with the Kurma Purana’s dharma-based spiritual training.
This verse is not explicitly sectarian; it presents a shared dharmic ideal—purification through tapas and Vedic commitment—compatible with the Kurma Purana’s broader Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis rather than emphasizing difference.