Kurukshetra, Pṛthūdaka Tīrtha, and the Marriage of Saṃvaraṇa with Tapatī
समुत्पत्य महायोगी गगनं रविमण्डलम् विवेश देवं तिग्मांशु ददर्श स्यन्दने स्थितम्
samutpatya mahāyogī gaganaṃ ravimaṇḍalam viveśa devaṃ tigmāṃśu dadarśa syandane sthitam
Rising up, the great yogin entered the sky, into the orb of the Sun. He beheld the god Tigmāṃśu (the Sun), stationed upon his chariot.
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Yogic attainment is portrayed as enabling direct ‘darśana’ of cosmic deities; reverence toward divine order (ṛta/dharma) is implied by the approach to Sūrya, the visible regulator of time.
Primarily supports Sarga/Pratisarga-style cosmography (description of higher realms and divine stations) rather than vamśa or manvantara material; it is a theophanic-cosmological passage.
Entering the ‘ravi-maṇḍala’ symbolizes penetrating the luminous principle—Sūrya as the manifest eye of the cosmos—suggesting that disciplined yoga can traverse from gross space to divine presence.