Description of the Origin of the Cosmic Egg (Brahmāṇḍa) and the Ocean as King of Tīrthas
सर्वपापिविनिर्मुक्तः सर्वदुःखविवर्जितः । वृंदारकहरिः श्रीमाचूपयौवनगर्वितः ॥ ५ ॥
sarvapāpivinirmuktaḥ sarvaduḥkhavivarjitaḥ | vṛṃdārakahariḥ śrīmācūpayauvanagarvitaḥ || 5 ||
সে সকল পাপ থেকে মুক্ত এবং সব দুঃখ থেকে বিমুক্ত হয়—দেবগণের প্রিয় হরি, শ্রীসমৃদ্ধ, অজর যৌবনের গৌরবে দীপ্ত।
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in the Uttara-Bhaga narrative style)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhakti
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It defines Hari as the power that eradicates pāpa (sin) and duḥkha (sorrow), presenting devotion to Vishnu as a direct purifier and a source of auspiciousness (Śrī).
By praising Vishnu’s qualities—sin-destroying, sorrow-removing, and eternally radiant—it frames bhakti as remembrance and glorification (stuti) that turns the mind toward the divine refuge associated with freedom from suffering.
No specific Vedanga technique is taught in this shloka; it functions as a stotra-style descriptor used within tirtha/mahatmya contexts, supporting ritual recitation and devotional practice rather than technical instruction.