Bhojana-vidhi and Nitya-karman: Directions for Eating, Prāṇa-Oblations, Sandhyā, and Conduct Leading to Apavarga
मुक्ते शशिनि भुञ्जीत यदि न स्यान्महानिशा / अमुक्तयोरस्तङ्गतयोरद्याद् दृष्ट्वा परे ऽहनि
mukte śaśini bhuñjīta yadi na syānmahāniśā / amuktayorastaṅgatayoradyād dṛṣṭvā pare 'hani
Quand la lune s’est levée, on peut prendre le repas, pourvu que ce ne soit pas la « grande nuit » (la nuit de jeûne prescrite). Mais si tous deux (le soleil et la lune) ne se sont pas encore levés, ou se sont déjà couchés, qu’on ne mange que le lendemain, après les avoir vus se lever.
Sūta (narrating traditional dharma-vidhi as taught by the sages within the Kurma Purana’s vrata context)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Indirectly: it frames self-mastery through disciplined timing and restraint, which the Kurma Purana treats as supportive of inner purity (śuddhi) needed for higher knowledge of Ātman/Iśvara.
It emphasizes vrata-niyama (disciplinary observance) and control of appetite and timing—foundational restraints that support steadiness of mind (citta-sthairya) for mantra, japa, and contemplative worship in the Kurma Purana’s yogic-dharma framework.
By presenting dharma as a shared, non-sectarian discipline: such observances are upheld across Shaiva and Vaishnava practice in the Kurma Purana, where devotion and restraint converge toward one supreme goal.