अवभृथस्नान-तीर्थयात्रा-तेजोदर्शनम् | Avabhṛtha Bath, Tīrtha-Pilgrimage, and the Vision of Divine Radiance
सरस्वतीं नदीं दृष्ट्वा मुनयो हृष्टमानसाः । समाप्य सत्रं प्रारब्धं चक्रुस्तत्रावगाहनम्
sarasvatīṃ nadīṃ dṛṣṭvā munayo hṛṣṭamānasāḥ | samāpya satraṃ prārabdhaṃ cakrustatrāvagāhanam
စရस्वတီ မြစ်ကို မြင်ကြသောအခါ မုနိတို့၏ စိတ်နှလုံး ပျော်ရွှင်လန်းဆန်းသွားသည်။ စတင်ထားသော ယဇ္ဉပွဲ (စတြ) ကို ပြီးစီးစေပြီးနောက် ထိုနေရာ၌ သန့်စင်ပူဇော်ရေး ရေချိုးအဝဂါဟနကို ပြုလုပ်ကြသည်။
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Sthala Purana: Sages, delighted at Sarasvatī’s appearance, complete their satra and perform avagāhana; the tīrtha functions as a ritual seal to the sacrifice.
Significance: Ritual bathing after yajña signifies purification, completion (pūrṇatā), and readiness for further pilgrimage.
Role: nurturing
It presents sacred geography and discipline together: after completing a satra (extended yajna), the sages purify themselves through tirtha-snāna in Sarasvatī, showing that outer rites and inner cleanliness support steady progress toward Shiva-realization (Pati) and freedom from bonds (pāśa).
The verse frames proper preparation for Saguna Shiva worship: completing ordained rites and performing ritual bathing at a tīrtha are traditional preliminaries before approaching the Linga with mantra, offerings, and devotion—purifying body and mind for focused bhakti.
A clear takeaway is tīrtha-snāna (ritual immersion) after religious observances; practically, one may follow it with Shiva-japa (e.g., the Panchakshara “Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) and calm meditation, treating purification as a support for concentrated worship.