भागद्वयं विरचितं तल्लिङ्गमृषिपुंगव । चतुर्विंशतिसाहस्रं वाराहं द्वादशं विदुः
bhāgadvayaṃ viracitaṃ talliṅgamṛṣipuṃgava | caturviṃśatisāhasraṃ vārāhaṃ dvādaśaṃ viduḥ
Oh el mejor de los sabios, el Liṅga Purāṇa está compuesto en dos partes. El Vārāha Purāṇa, que los eruditos conocen como el duodécimo, contiene veinticuatro mil versos.
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa/Sauti), addressing Śaunaka and the sages (deduced)
Listener: ṛṣipuṅgava (addressed sage)
Scene: A calm śāstra-sabhā: a revered ṛṣi addressed as ṛṣipuṅgava listens while a narrator enumerates Purāṇas, their divisions, and verse-counts; palm-leaf manuscripts and a liṅga emblem subtly indicate the Liṅga Purāṇa reference.
Sacred texts are preserved with known internal structure (parts) and standard counts, supporting faithful recitation and lineage-based transmission.
None; this verse continues the Purāṇa enumeration rather than describing a tīrtha.
None; it notes textual division (two parts) and verse-count.