पुस्तके लिखितं चैतन्नागतीर्थसमुद्भवम् । माहात्म्यं तिष्ठते यत्र न सर्पस्तत्र तिष्ठति
pustake likhitaṃ caitannāgatīrthasamudbhavam | māhātmyaṃ tiṣṭhate yatra na sarpastatra tiṣṭhati
And where this Nāga-tīrtha māhātmya—written down in a book—remains, no serpent stays in that place.
Sūta (deduced from section frame; explicit Sūta at 184.1)
Tirtha: Nāga-tīrtha
Type: kund
Listener: Audience of the māhātmya (implied)
Scene: A household shrine shelf holds a wrapped manuscript labeled ‘Nāga-tīrtha-māhātmya’; a serpent at the doorway turns away; the room is bright with lamp and incense.
The māhātmya is treated as sacred presence: preserving it (even in written form) is a protective dharmic act.
Nāga-tīrtha, whose māhātmya is said to sanctify and protect the place where it is kept.
Leaning toward dharmic preservation: writing and keeping the māhātmya text (pustaka-likhana/saṅgraha).
Read Skanda Purana in the Vedapath app
Scan the QR code to open this directly in the app, with audio, word-by-word meanings, and more.