वृत्तैः सपुलकैः स्निग्धैः स्त्रीणामिव पयोधरैः । दुष्प्राप्यैरल्पपुण्यानां क्वचिदाभाति बिल्वकैः
vṛttaiḥ sapulakaiḥ snigdhaiḥ strīṇāmiva payodharaiḥ | duṣprāpyairalpapuṇyānāṃ kvacidābhāti bilvakaiḥ
In some places it gleams with bilva trees—round, glossy, and bristling with fresh shoots, like the breasts of women—bilvas hard to obtain for those of little merit.
Narrator (within Prabhāsakṣetra Māhātmya context)
Tirtha: Prabhāsa-kṣetra (Somnātha sphere)
Type: kshetra
Scene: A grove of glossy, round bilva clusters with fresh bristling shoots; the poet’s simile overlays a sensual human form, yet the devotional subtext marks bilva as a rare Śiva-offering granted only to the meritorious.
Merit (puṇya) conditions access to sacred abundance; the holy grove’s gifts are portrayed as rare for the spiritually unprepared.
Prabhāsa-kṣetra’s bilva-filled areas are praised as especially auspicious and spiritually ‘rare’.
No explicit rite is stated, though bilva is traditionally associated with Śiva-upacāra (offering), implied by the sacred setting.