Prayāga-māhātmya — The Greatness of Prayāga and the Discipline of Pilgrimage
अतस्तीर्थे न गृह्णीयात् पुण्येष्वायतनेषु च / निमित्तेषु च सर्वेषु अप्रमत्तो द्विजो भवेत्
atastīrthe na gṛhṇīyāt puṇyeṣvāyataneṣu ca / nimitteṣu ca sarveṣu apramatto dvijo bhavet
Ainsi, le dvija (le « deux-fois-né ») ne doit pas accepter de dons ou de gains indus dans un tīrtha, ni au sein des sanctuaires sacrés ; et, en toute circonstance sainte, qu’il demeure vigilant, sans négligence quant à la pureté et à la juste conduite.
Sūta (narrator) conveying the Kurma Purana’s dharma-instructions of the sages
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Indirectly: it emphasizes apramāda (non-negligence), a prerequisite for inner clarity. Such vigilance supports self-knowledge by preventing the mind from being clouded by greed, impurity, or misuse of sacred contexts.
The verse highlights apramāda—continuous attentiveness—as a foundational discipline. In the Kurma Purana’s spiritual culture (including later Ishvara Gita and Pāśupata-oriented teaching), ethical restraint in holy settings stabilizes the practitioner for japa, vrata, and meditation.
Not explicitly; it presents a shared dharma framework honored across Shaiva–Vaishnava sacred spaces. The emphasis is on universal sanctity—tīrthas and āyatanas—where right conduct supports devotion regardless of sectarian form.