Narmadā-māhātmya: Amarakāṇṭaka, Jāleśvara, Kapilā–Viśalyakaraṇī, and the Supreme Purifying Power of Darśana
कावेरी नाम विपुला नदी कल्पषनाशिनी / तत्र स्नात्वा महादेवमर्चयेद् वृषभध्वजम् / संगमे नर्मदायास्तु रुद्रलोके महीयते
kāverī nāma vipulā nadī kalpaṣanāśinī / tatra snātvā mahādevamarcayed vṛṣabhadhvajam / saṃgame narmadāyāstu rudraloke mahīyate
Il est un vaste fleuve nommé Kāverī, qui détruit les péchés amassés au fil des âges. Après s’y être baigné, qu’on adore Mahādeva, le Seigneur à l’étendard du Taureau. Et au confluent avec la Narmadā, on est honoré dans le monde de Rudra.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing in a tirtha-mahatmya context
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Indirectly: it presents purification (snāna) and devotion (arcana) as means to refine the seeker, implying that inner elevation toward the highest state is supported by sacred discipline and divine grace, here expressed as attaining honor in Rudra’s realm.
It highlights tirtha-snāna (ritual bathing) and īśvara-arcana (worship of the Lord) as purificatory and devotional limbs that support steadiness of mind—often treated in Purāṇic yoga as preparatory practices that make higher contemplation and Pāśupata-oriented discipline fruitful.
Vishnu (as Lord Kūrma) recommends worship of Śiva (Mahādeva), reflecting the Kurma Purana’s harmonizing theology where devotion to one supreme reality is expressed through multiple divine forms, especially the Śiva–Viṣṇu synthesis.