Prahlada’s Pilgrimage Circuit: Tirtha-Mahatmya from Naimisha to Rudrakoti and Shalagrama
उदपाने तथा स्नात्वा तत्राभ्यर्च्य पितॄन् वशी गदापाणिं समभ्यर्च्य गोपतिं चापि शङ्करम्
udapāne tathā snātvā tatrābhyarcya pitṝn vaśī gadāpāṇiṃ samabhyarcya gopatiṃ cāpi śaṅkaram
Narrator/teacher voice within the Purāṇic discourse (instructional passage)
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Purāṇic tīrtha practice often layers obligations: pitṛ-kārya (ancestral duty) is performed alongside iṣṭa-devatā worship. The verse portrays Gayā as a confluence where ancestral rites and the worship of major deities mutually reinforce merit.
It signals a specific, named or functionally distinct water-source within the sacred terrain. Such wells/ponds are treated as ritual stations (micro-tīrthas), each with its own prescribed acts like snāna and arcana.
They are distinct epithets that can refer to the same supreme deity (Viṣṇu) in different iconographic or local shrine contexts: Gadāpāṇi emphasizes the mace-bearing form, while Gopati emphasizes lordship/protection associated with cows and pastoral symbolism.