Devī-tattva, Śakti–Śaktimān doctrine, Kāla–Māyā cosmology, and Māheśvara Yoga instruction
भारती परमानन्दा परापरविभेदिका / सर्वप्रहरणोपेता काम्या कामेश्वरेश्वरी
bhāratī paramānandā parāparavibhedikā / sarvapraharaṇopetā kāmyā kāmeśvareśvarī
Elle est Bhāratī (Vāc/Sarasvatī), la Béatitude suprême; Celle qui distingue le supérieur et l’inférieur. Pourvue de toutes armes et de toute puissance, elle est la Donatrice de grâces désirée—la Souveraine Dame de Kāmeśvara.
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) teaching within the Ishvara Gita context
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
By portraying the Supreme as Paramānanda (supreme bliss) and as the power that discriminates parā and aparā, the verse implies that liberation comes through right discernment (viveka) guided by the supreme Śakti—leading the self beyond lower appearances to the highest reality.
The verse emphasizes viveka (discrimination of higher vs. lower) and mantra-oriented devotion to the Goddess as Bhāratī (Vāc). In Ishvara-Gita-style teaching, such discernment and mantra-bhakti support Pāśupata-aligned inner discipline: steadiness, purification, and single-pointed contemplation of the Supreme.
Spoken in a Vishnu/Kūrma-led discourse yet praising the supreme Īśvarī connected with Kāmeśvara (a Śaiva epithet), it reflects the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis: one Supreme Reality expressed as Śiva-Śakti while taught through a Vaiṣṇava voice.