Sapta-dvīpa Cosmography and the Vision of Śvetadvīpa–Vaikuṇṭha
विचिन्त्यमानो योगीन्द्रैः सनन्दनपुरोगमैः / स्वात्मानन्दामृतं पीत्वा परं तत् तमसः परम्
vicintyamāno yogīndraiḥ sanandanapurogamaiḥ / svātmānandāmṛtaṃ pītvā paraṃ tat tamasaḥ param
সনন্দন-প্রমুখ যোগীন্দ্রগণ যাঁকে ধ্যান করেন, তিনি স্বাত্মানন্দ-অমৃত পান করে তমসেরও ঊর্ধ্বে, পরাত্পর পরম তত্ত্বরূপে বিরাজমান।
Narrator (Purāṇic voice describing the Supreme as realized by Yogins)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents the Supreme as directly realizable as the nectar-like bliss of one’s own Self (svātmānanda), and as a reality that transcends tamas—ignorance, obscuration, and spiritual darkness.
The verse emphasizes vicāra/dhyāna—steady contemplation by accomplished yogins—culminating in inner assimilation (‘drinking’) of Self-bliss, a classic Yogic marker of samādhi-like realization beyond the guṇas, especially beyond tamas.
Rather than naming either deity, it speaks in a shared Purāṇic idiom of the one Supreme Reality realized in Yoga—supporting the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis where the highest truth is beyond sectarian limitation and beyond tamas.