पितृपैतामहं विप्रा धर्मगुप्तोऽतिधार्मिकः । उन्मादैरप्यपस्मारैर्ग्रहैर्दुष्टैश्च ये नराः
pitṛpaitāmahaṃ viprā dharmagupto'tidhārmikaḥ | unmādairapyapasmārairgrahairduṣṭaiśca ye narāḥ
O Brahmanen, Dharmagupta—überaus dharmisch, nach Art seiner Väter und Großväter—(verkündete): jene Menschen, die von Wahnsinn, Fallsucht und von bösen Grahas heimgesucht werden…
Narrator (introducing Dharmagupta’s proclamation)
Tirtha: Dhanuṣkoṭi
Type: tirtha
Listener: Brāhmaṇas/ṛṣis (addressed as ‘viprāḥ’)
Scene: Dharmagupta, righteous like his forefathers, addresses assembled brāhmaṇas and people at the shore; sufferers of madness and epilepsy stand nearby, seeking hope as the king points toward the sacred waters.
The Purāṇa frames sacred geography as compassionate medicine: tīrthas relieve both moral impurity and debilitating afflictions.
The verse sets up the claim that Dhanuṣkoṭi (in the Setu region) grants release from such afflictions.
Implied: seeking release through tīrtha practice (completed explicitly in the next verse as ‘nimajjana’—ritual immersion).