आपः पतिव्रतास्पर्शमभिलष्यंति सर्वदा । गायत्र्याघविनाशो नो पातिव्रत्येन साऽघनुत्
āpaḥ pativratāsparśamabhilaṣyaṃti sarvadā | gāyatryāghavināśo no pātivratyena sā'ghanut
المياهُ تشتاقُ دائماً إلى مسِّ pativratā. وحتى القدرةُ المرتبطةُ بغاياتري (Gāyatrī) على محوِ الخطيئة تتحقّق لنا بفضلِ عفّتها ووفائها؛ فبتلك العبادة تُبدِّد الإثم.
Unknown (contextual narrator within Dharmāraṇya Khaṇḍa; likely a Purāṇic teacher-voice)
Tirtha: Āpaḥ (Sarva-tīrtha-svarūpa) touched by Pativratā
Type: river
Scene: A river personified as a goddess rises with folded hands toward a pativratā; ripples form Gāyatrī’s meter-like patterns; sins depicted as dark smoke dissipate upon her presence.
Devotion and moral steadfastness are presented as a powerful purifier—capable of removing sin like the most sacred mantra-energies.
No single site is named; the verse uses the imagery of sacred waters and purification in a generalized Mahatmya style.
Gāyatrī is referenced as a sin-destroyer, but the verse does not prescribe japa; it praises pativratā-dharma as an equivalent purifier.