तत्र स्नात्वा नरो राजन्नियमस्थो जितेन्द्रियः । उपोष्य रजनीमेकां कुलानां तारयेच्छतम्
tatra snātvā naro rājanniyamastho jitendriyaḥ | upoṣya rajanīmekāṃ kulānāṃ tārayecchatam
তাত স্নান কৰি, হে ৰাজন, নিয়মত স্থিৰ আৰু ইন্দ্ৰিয়জয়ী নৰে, এটা ৰাতি উপবাস কৰিলে, নিজৰ কুলৰ এশ পুৰুষক উদ্ধাৰ কৰিব।
Śrī Mārkaṇḍeya
Tirtha: Amarakantaka/Narmadā tīrtha (tatra)
Type: ghat
Listener: King (rājan)
Scene: A disciplined pilgrim at dawn bathing in a clear pool/river bend, then sitting in restraint through the night with a lamp; behind him, a line of ancestral figures (pitṛs) rising upward, symbolizing ‘hundred generations delivered’.
Self-control plus tīrtha-practice magnifies merit, extending spiritual benefit beyond the individual to one’s lineage.
The tīrtha ‘there’ in context—Narmadā at/near Amarakantaka—where bathing and observance are especially potent.
Snāna (bathing) at the site, niyama (observances), jitendriyatā (sense-restraint), and upavāsa (fasting) for one night.