कुलानां तारयेद्विंशं दश पूर्वान् दशापरान् । दक्षिणस्यां ततो मूर्तौ शुचिर्भूत्वा समाहितः
kulānāṃ tārayedviṃśaṃ daśa pūrvān daśāparān | dakṣiṇasyāṃ tato mūrtau śucirbhūtvā samāhitaḥ
يُنقِذ عشرين سلالةً من الأسرة: عشرَ أجيالٍ سابقةً وعشرَ أجيالٍ لاحقة. ثم، بعد أن يتطهّر ويجمع قلبه، يوجّه الشعيرة نحو الصورة الجنوبية (جهة الـPitṛ).
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa) (deduced)
Tirtha: Revā-tīrtha (contextual)
Type: ghat
Listener: Śrotṛ audience (implied)
Scene: A devotee, purified and steady, turns toward the south on a riverbank, performing offerings; behind him a stylized lineage tree shows ancestors and descendants being uplifted.
Ancestral rites are communal in effect—uplifting both forebears and descendants—when performed with purity and focus.
The verse continues the Reva Khaṇḍa rite-context rather than naming a new tīrtha; the emphasis is on pitṛ-directional practice.
Maintain śauca (purity) and samādhāna (collected attention), and orient the pitṛ-rite toward the southern direction.