समुद्र उवाच । नमामि ते राघव पादपंकजं सीतापते सौख्यद पादसेवनात् । नमामि ते गौतमदारमोक्षजं श्रीपादरेणुं सुरवृन्दसेव्यम्
samudra uvāca | namāmi te rāghava pādapaṃkajaṃ sītāpate saukhyada pādasevanāt | namāmi te gautamadāramokṣajaṃ śrīpādareṇuṃ suravṛndasevyam
قال المحيط: «أنحني لساقيْك اللوتسيّتَيْن يا راغهافا—يا ربّ سيتا—فإنّ خدمة قدميك تمنح السعادة والبركة. وأنحني لغبار قدميك المقدّس، الذي تعبده جموع الآلهة، والمشهور بأنه الوسيلة التي بها أُطلقت زوجة غوتاما من لعنتها».
Samudra (Ocean)
Tirtha: Setu-kṣetra (primary context); Ahalyā-uddhāra-smṛti tīrtha (allusive)
Type: kshetra
Listener: Rāghava (Rāma); overheard by brāhmaṇas via narrator
Scene: Sāgara recites a formal stotra, bowing to Rāma’s lotus-feet; a visionary vignette may show Ahalyā’s release as a secondary panel, while devas hover to honor the pāda-reṇu.
Devotion to the Lord’s feet is portrayed as a direct cause of welfare and even liberation—purifying the fallen and humbling the mighty.
Setu/Rāmeśvaram’s sacred seascape, where the ocean itself becomes a devotee praising Rāma.
Implicitly, pāda-sevā and stuti (service and praise) are upheld as devotional practices; no external rite is specified.