तप्तशूलं तप्तशिलां पुरी षह्रदमेव च । तथा शोणितकूपं च सेतुस्नायी न पश्यति
taptaśūlaṃ taptaśilāṃ purī ṣahradameva ca | tathā śoṇitakūpaṃ ca setusnāyī na paśyati
Celui qui se baigne à Setu ne voit point les enfers nommés Lance Ardente, Roche Ardente, Lac d’Excréments et Puits de Sang.
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa) narrating to the sages (contextual attribution within Brāhma Khaṇḍa Māhātmya style)
Tirtha: Setutīrtha (Setubandha)
Type: kshetra
Listener: Brāhmaṇas (addressed as ‘viprāḥ’)
Scene: A pilgrim at the sea-shore of Setu performs snāna at dawn; behind him loom symbolic visions of hells—heated spear, heated rock, excrement-lake, blood-well—dissolving into ocean mist as divine protection descends.
Setu-snāna is proclaimed as a powerful purifier that prevents the devotee from falling into severe hell-realms.
Setu—identified with Setubandha/Rāmeśvara sacred geography in the Skanda Purana’s Setu Māhātmya.
Snāna (holy bathing) at Setu.