Devotpatti-nirūpaṇa — Hari’s Pūrṇatva
Completeness) and the Ritual Doctrine of Sāra (Essence
एकवारे च सारं स्याद्द्विवारे च ततोधिकम् / एकादश्यां महाभाग तीर्थं गन्धादिमिश्रितम्
ekavāre ca sāraṃ syāddvivāre ca tatodhikam / ekādaśyāṃ mahābhāga tīrthaṃ gandhādimiśritam
এবাৰ কৰিলে যথেষ্ট ফল হয়, দুবাৰ কৰিলে তাতোকৈ অধিক। হে মহাভাগ! একাদশীত সুগন্ধ আদি মিহলাই তীৰ্থজল প্ৰস্তুত কৰিব লাগে।
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda)
Concept: Merit increases with repeated, careful observance; on Ekadashi, prepare sacred water with fragrances as part of refined worship.
Vedantic Theme: Sattvika karma—performed with care and purity—supports chitta-shuddhi and steadies devotion.
Application: Perform Ekadashi worship at least once with full attention; if possible, repeat (morning/evening). Prepare tirtha-jala with clean water and mild fragrance (e.g., sandal), keeping it simple and pure.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: ritual setting (home/temple)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: procedural vrata guidance (anushthana frequency and phala gradation); Garuda Purana: tirtha-jala/prasada handling in Vishnu worship contexts
This verse highlights the eleventh day as a specific ritual milestone, prescribing the use of consecrated water (tīrtha) enhanced with fragrances, indicating heightened sanctity and careful observance for the departed’s post-death rites.
It states a graded result: performing it once is considered sufficient, while performing it twice is said to produce greater benefit, reflecting the Purana’s emphasis on intensified ritual care increasing merit.
If one follows śrāddha traditions, this verse suggests keeping the observance sincere and orderly—at minimum completing the rite properly, and on key days (like the eleventh) using clean, respectfully prepared sacred water with traditional purifying additions.