सहस्रधारासंज्ञं तु सर्वकिल्बिषनाशनम् । यस्मिन्रामाज्ञया वीरो लक्ष्मणः परवीरहा । प्राणानुत्सृज्य योगेन ययौ शेषात्मतां पुरा
sahasradhārāsaṃjñaṃ tu sarvakilbiṣanāśanam | yasminrāmājñayā vīro lakṣmaṇaḥ paravīrahā | prāṇānutsṛjya yogena yayau śeṣātmatāṃ purā
Tempat suci itu bernama Sahasradhārā, pemusnah segala kilbiṣa (dosa). Di sana dahulu, atas perintah Rāma, sang pahlawan Lakṣmaṇa—penakluk jawara musuh—melepaskan nyawanya melalui penarikan diri yogis dan mencapai keadaan Śeṣa (Ananta).
Narrative voice (contextually Sūta relating the Māhātmya)
Tirtha: Sahasradhārā
Type: ghat
Scene: On Sarayū’s bank, Lakṣmaṇa—heroic yet serene—sits in yogic posture, receiving Rāma’s command in memory; as prāṇa withdraws, a luminous serpent-form (Śeṣa/Ananta) manifests subtly, while pilgrims witness the sanctity of Sahasradhārā’s many-streamed waters.
It teaches that a sanctified tīrtha can purify even deep moral taints, and that dharma-filled obedience and yogic mastery culminate in divine attainment.
Sahasradhārā Tīrtha, praised as ‘sarva-kilbiṣa-nāśana’ (the remover of all sins) within Ayodhyā’s sacred geography.
No explicit rite is prescribed here; the verse chiefly proclaims the tīrtha’s sin-destroying power and recalls Lakṣmaṇa’s yogic relinquishing of prāṇas.