Brahmā’s Puṣkara Sacrifice: Ṛtvij System, Sāvitrī’s Reconciliation, Tīrtha-Catalogue, Śrāddha & Initiation Rites, and Vrata Fruits
वसिष्ठश्चार्बुदे चैव नारदश्चोत्पलावते । मेलके श्रुतिदाताहं प्रपाते यादसांपतिः
vasiṣṭhaścārbude caiva nāradaścotpalāvate | melake śrutidātāhaṃ prapāte yādasāṃpatiḥ
ଅର୍ବୁଦରେ ବସିଷ୍ଠ; ଉତ୍ପଲାବତରେ ନାରଦ। ମେଲକରେ ମୁଁ ଶ୍ରୁତିଦାତା; ପ୍ରପାତରେ ଜଳଚରମାନଙ୍କର ପତି।
Unspecified in the provided excerpt (context needed from Adhyaya 34 framing dialogue).
Concept: The One Lord is encountered through many sacred stations—each kṣetra reveals a distinct facet (guruhood, aquatic sovereignty, sage-presence).
Application: Treat places, teachers, and natural domains (especially waters) as sanctified; cultivate gratitude and restraint when visiting rivers/ponds; learn śāstra with humility as a form of pilgrimage.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: tirtha
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A stylized sacred map unfolds like a lotus-petal mandala: Mount Arbuda rises with Vasiṣṭha seated in meditation, while Nārada hovers over a lake of blue lotuses at Otpalāvata, vīṇā in hand. At Melaka, a radiant deity-figure bestows palm-leaf śruti to seekers; at Prapāta, a roaring waterfall descends into a jeweled pool where the lord of aquatic beings presides amid fish and nāgas.","primary_figures":["Vasiṣṭha","Nārada","Vishnu (as kṣetra-presence)","aquatic beings (matsya, nāga, makara)","pilgrims/seekers"],"setting":"Pilgrimage panorama combining mountain shrine, lotus-lake, forest āśrama, and waterfall-tirtha in one continuous sacred landscape.","lighting_mood":"divine radiance","color_palette":["sapphire blue","lotus pink","emerald green","gold leaf","pearl white"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a lotus-mandala composition showing Mount Arbuda with sage Vasiṣṭha, Nārada above a lotus lake at Otpalāvata, and Vishnu’s kṣetra-presence at Melaka giving śruti on palm leaves; at Prapāta a waterfall-tirtha with makara and nāga motifs; heavy gold leaf halos, rich crimson and emerald textiles, gem-studded ornaments, ornate temple arches framing each kṣetra panel.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: lyrical Himalayan-like slopes for Arbuda, delicate linework for Vasiṣṭha’s hermitage, Nārada gliding over a cool blue lotus lake, and a silvery waterfall at Prapāta; soft washes, refined faces, detailed flora, thin white highlights on water, airy perspective with layered hills.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines and flat natural pigments; Vishnu as the central kṣetra-presence with large expressive eyes, flanked by Vasiṣṭha and Nārada in separate vignettes; stylized lotus lake and waterfall with makara forms; dominant red, yellow, green with gold accents, temple-wall symmetry.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: a sacred landscape framed by intricate floral borders and lotus motifs; Nārada and Vasiṣṭha placed like devotional icons; water-themed panel at Prapāta with fish and makara; deep indigo background, gold detailing, peacocks near the lotus lake, temple bells and garlands painted along the border."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Desh","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["flowing water","temple bells","soft drone (tanpura)","birds near a lake","conch shell (distant)"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: वसिष्ठश्चार्बुदे=वसिष्ठः+च+अर्बुदे; चैव=च+एव; नारदश्चोत्पलावते=नारदः+च+उत्पलावते; श्रुतिदाताहं=श्रुतिदाता+अहम्; यादसांपतिः=यादसाम्+पतिः (षष्ठी-सम्बन्ध).
It maps revered sages and divine functions onto specific tīrthas (Arbuda, Otpalāvata, Melaka, Prapāta), reflecting the Padma Purāṇa’s practice of sacralizing landscape through pilgrim-sites linked with rishis and divine presence.
By presenting holy places as living centers of divine accessibility—where sacred instruction is ‘given’ and divine lordship is encountered—the verse supports a devotional worldview in which pilgrimage, reverence to sages, and receiving sacred teaching become acts of bhakti.
The verse implicitly teaches that one should seek śruti/true instruction from sanctified sources (tīrthas and rishis) and cultivate humility toward sacred lineages, recognizing that divine guidance manifests through places, teachers, and traditions.