Tīrtha-yātrā: Phalaśruti and Sacred Geography from Lohitya to Prayāga
Pulastya’s Instruction
कपिलस्य च केदारं समासाद्य सुदुर्लभम् । अन्तर्धानमवाप्रोति तपसा दग्धकिल्बिष:
kapilasya ca kedāraṃ samāsādya sudurlabham | antardhānam avāpnoti tapasā dagdhakilbiṣaḥ ||
Al llegar al Kedāra (kedāra) sagrado de Kapila, sumamente difícil de alcanzar, aquel cuyas culpas han sido consumidas por la austeridad (tapas) obtiene el poder de la desaparición—queda oculto a la vista ordinaria.
घुलस्त्य उवाच
Austerity (tapas) purifies sin (kilbiṣa), and spiritual attainments (such as antardhāna, becoming hidden) arise from that inner purification; sacred places are portrayed as powerful, but their fruits are linked to ethical and ascetic readiness.
The speaker describes the extraordinary result associated with reaching Kapila’s rare sacred kedāra: one who has burned away sins through tapas gains the capacity for disappearance/invisibility, illustrating the potency of the tīrtha and the transformative role of ascetic discipline.