Narmadā-māhātmya: Amarakāṇṭaka, Jāleśvara, Kapilā–Viśalyakaraṇī, and the Supreme Purifying Power of Darśana
प्रदक्षिणं तु यः कुर्यात् पर्वतं ह्यमरकण्टकम् / पौण्डरीकस्य यज्ञस्य फलं प्राप्नोति मानः
pradakṣiṇaṃ tu yaḥ kuryāt parvataṃ hyamarakaṇṭakam / pauṇḍarīkasya yajñasya phalaṃ prāpnoti mānaḥ
Quiconque accomplit la pradakṣiṇā, la circumambulation rituelle du mont Amarakantaka, obtient le mérite et le fruit du sacrifice Pauṇḍarīka.
Sūta (narrator) relaying the Kurma Purana’s tirtha-mahātmya teaching in the Purva-bhaga
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Indirectly: it teaches that dharmic action performed with reverence in a sanctified field (tīrtha) yields transformative merit—preparing the mind for steadiness and purity, which are prerequisites for realizing the Self in later philosophical teachings.
The practice is karmayoga-oriented pilgrimage discipline: pradakṣiṇā (clockwise circumambulation) as a bodily form of devotion and attention, aligning the practitioner with sacred order (ṛta/dharma) and cultivating bhakti, restraint, and one-pointedness.
By emphasizing tīrtha and yajña as universally valid means of merit, it reflects the Purana’s synthesizing outlook: sacred acts are upheld across sectarian lines, supporting the broader Shaiva–Vaishnava harmony found throughout the Kurma Purana.