Meru-Topography: Cities of Brahmā and the Dikpālas; Descent of Gaṅgā; Varṣa-Lotus and Boundary Mountains
तत्राप्सरोगणैः सिद्धैः सेव्यमानो ऽमराधिपः / आस्ते स वरुणो राजा तत्र गच्छन्ति ये ऽम्बुदाः / तीर्थयात्रापरी नित्यं ये च लोके ऽधमर्षिणः
tatrāpsarogaṇaiḥ siddhaiḥ sevyamāno 'marādhipaḥ / āste sa varuṇo rājā tatra gacchanti ye 'mbudāḥ / tīrthayātrāparī nityaṃ ye ca loke 'dhamarṣiṇaḥ
Di sana, dilayani oleh rombongan Apsarā dan para Siddha yang sempurna, raja Varuṇa—tuan di antara para dewa—bersemayam. Ke tempat itu juga datang awan pembawa hujan; dan datang pula mereka yang sentiasa tekun berziarah ke tīrtha, serta insan yang bebas daripada iri hati dan kebencian.
Purāṇic narrator (Vyāsa/Śaunaka-style narration within the Kurma Purana’s tirtha-mahatmya section)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Indirectly, it points to inner qualification: the tīrtha-bound person who is adhamarṣi (free from resentment) is fit for higher knowledge. In the Kurma Purana’s broader teaching, such purity of disposition supports Atma-jñāna and devotion that culminate in realizing the Self beyond envy and dualistic agitation.
The verse emphasizes preparatory discipline rather than a technique: nitya-tīrtha-yātrā (regular sacred pilgrimage) and adhamarṣitā (non-envious forbearance). In Kurma Purana’s yoga-ethos, these function as yama-like foundations that steady the mind for mantra, worship, and contemplative practice.
This specific verse is not explicitly sectarian; it frames sacred geography and ethical purity as universally honored in the divine order (Varuṇa attended by Siddhas). In the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva-Vaishnava synthesis, such tīrtha-dharma and inner restraint are shared prerequisites for worship of both Hari (Vishnu/Kurma) and Hara (Shiva).