here, a three-night fast (as indicated by the prose gloss)'}, {'term''aśvamedha', 'definition': 'the horse-sacrifice
here, a three-night fast (as indicated by the prose gloss)'}, {'term':
emblematic of supreme royal merit'}, {'term''sahasra-godāna', 'definition': 'gift of a thousand cows
emblematic of supreme royal merit'}, {'term':
a major act of charity'}, {'term''kuloddhāra', 'definition': 'uplift/salvation of one’s lineage
a major act of charity'}, {'term':
Speaker
घुलस्त्य उवाच
Characters & Entities
G
Ghulasthya
N
Narādhipa (the king addressed)
A
Arundhatīvaṭa
S
Sāmudraka-tīrtha
A
Aśvamedha (sacrifice)
G
Go-dāna (gift of cows)
Character Dynamics
Dharma Sankata (Moral Dilemma)
Verse Rasa (Emotional Essence)
Philosophical Teaching
Political Layer
Geographic Context
Educational Q&A
Pilgrimage is not merely travel but disciplined practice: ritual bathing, brahmacarya, mental concentration, and fasting. Such self-restraint and purity are presented as generating merit comparable to grand sacrifices and major charities, with benefits extending to one’s lineage.
A speaker named Ghulasthya instructs a king about a specific tīrtha-sequence: go to Arundhatīvaṭa, bathe at the Sāmudraka tīrtha, observe celibacy and focused mind, and fast for three nights, promising exalted sacrificial and charitable fruits and the uplift of the family line.