पाषाणाकृतयस्तत्र ऋषयोऽद्यापि संस्थिताः । दृश्यंते मानुषे देवि सर्वपातकनाशनाः
pāṣāṇākṛtayastatra ṛṣayo'dyāpi saṃsthitāḥ | dṛśyaṃte mānuṣe devi sarvapātakanāśanāḥ
There, O Goddess, the sages—formed as stone-images—still remain. They are seen in the human realm, and they destroy all great sins.
Īśvara (Śiva)
Tirtha: Ṛṣitīrtha / Ṛṣitoya-saṅgama (contextual)
Type: sangam
Listener: Devī (Pārvatī)
Scene: A coastal sacred landscape of Prabhāsa with weathered stone forms resembling seated sages; pilgrims behold them with folded hands, sensing their continuing presence and purifying power.
The Purāṇa frames sacred places as enduring witnesses of spiritual power—visible signs that inspire repentance and purification.
Ṛṣi-tīrtha in Prabhāsa-kṣetra, marked by stone-formed sages.
No explicit rite is stated; the verse emphasizes darśana of the sacred forms and the tīrtha’s power to destroy sins.