बिंबाधरानुरक्तांशुलसद्दशन कुड्मलाम् । महार्हरत्नग्रेवेयतारहारविराजिताम्
biṃbādharānuraktāṃśulasaddaśana kuḍmalām | mahārharatnagreveyatārahāravirājitām
Meditate upon the Goddess: Her lips glow like the ripe bimba-fruit, Her teeth shine like budding blossoms, and She is radiant with a precious jeweled collar and a star-like necklace of gems.
Narratorial/Instructional voice within Brahmottarakhaṇḍa (ritual manual style; speaker not explicit in the snippet)
Scene: Close, frontal iconographic portrait of the Goddess: bimba-red lips, teeth like pale buds, jeweled collar (greveyaka) and a star-like gem necklace; luminous, auspicious facial radiance.
Devotional worship begins with dhyāna—seeing the Deity’s auspicious beauty as a gateway to inner steadiness and reverence.
No single tīrtha is named in this verse; it functions as a general dhyāna description used in Śaiva-Śākta worship.
A dhyāna (visualization) of the Goddess’ ornaments and radiance as a preparatory step for formal pūjā.