The Sarasvata Hymn to Vishnu (Vishnu-Pañjara) and the Redemption of a Rakshasa
तन्नारायण गोविन्द हरिकृष्णेश कीर्तनात् प्रयातु विलयं तोये यथा लवणभाजनम्
tannārāyaṇa govinda harikṛṣṇeśa kīrtanāt prayātu vilayaṃ toye yathā lavaṇabhājanam
By the kīrtana (devotional recitation) of those names—Nārāyaṇa, Govinda, Hari, Kṛṣṇa, and Īśa—may (all sin/impurity) pass into dissolution in water, just as a lump of salt dissolves in water.
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It asserts total, irreversible removal of impurity: as salt cannot be separated once dissolved, so sins are said to lose their separable ‘trace’ through sincere nāma-kīrtana, especially in a tīrtha context where water symbolizes ritual purification.
In this line it functions as a general epithet ‘Lord’ appended to a chain of Viṣṇu/Kṛṣṇa names; while Īśa can denote Śiva elsewhere, the immediate semantic field is Vaiṣṇava nāma-kīrtana.
Tīrtha sections often pair place-based merit with bhakti practices. Even when a specific river/tīrtha is not named in a given śloka, the imagery of ‘water’ aligns with the Purāṇic logic that sacred waters and sacred names jointly effect purification.