शक्या गणयितुं प्राज्ञैस्तदीयं सुकृतं न तु । ईदृशैः सुकृतैरेष तेनैव वपुषा नृपः
śakyā gaṇayituṃ prājñaistadīyaṃ sukṛtaṃ na tu | īdṛśaiḥ sukṛtaireṣa tenaiva vapuṣā nṛpaḥ
قد يقدر الحكماء على إحصاء أشياء كثيرة، لكنهم لا يقدرون على تقدير مقدار حسناته. وبمثل هذه المكارم العجيبة بلغ ذلك الملكُ الحالةَ الإلهية في الجسد نفسه.
Narrator (Sūta/Lomaharṣaṇa-context within Māheśvarakhaṇḍa)
Listener: Kuru listener implied
Scene: Sages attempting to ‘count’ merit symbolically—scrolls, beads, or tally marks—then stopping in awe as the king’s body becomes radiant, subtly transforming into a divine form without death.
Merit earned through dharmic action can become immeasurable and can elevate a person to divine realms—even without abandoning the body.
No single tīrtha is named in this verse; the emphasis is on the greatness of accumulated sukṛta within the Kaumārikākhaṇḍa narrative.
None explicitly; the verse praises the fruit (phala) of great merit rather than prescribing a specific rite.