Brahmacārin-Dharma: Guru-Sevā, Daily Vedic Study, Gāyatrī-Japa, and Anadhyāya Regulations
गत्वा वनं वा विधिवज्जुहुयाज्जातवेदसम् / अधीयीत सदा नित्यं ब्रह्मनिष्ठः समाहितः
gatvā vanaṃ vā vidhivajjuhuyājjātavedasam / adhīyīta sadā nityaṃ brahmaniṣṭhaḥ samāhitaḥ
Mesmo indo à floresta, deve, segundo o rito, oferecer oblações a Jātavedas (Agni); e, sempre sereno e recolhido, estabelecido em Brahman, dedicar-se continuamente ao estudo sagrado.
Lord Kūrma (Vishnu) instructing Indradyumna (didactic discourse on dharma and disciplined practice)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It points to Brahman-realization as the practitioner’s stable ground: ritual action is upheld, yet the culmination is brahmaniṣṭhā—abidance in the Supreme Reality beyond mere external performance.
The verse emphasizes samādhāna (collectedness) alongside nitya-svādhyāya (daily scriptural recitation/study) and disciplined yajña to Agni—an integrated path where outer nitya-karma supports inner concentration and steadiness.
While not naming Śiva directly, it reflects the Kurma Purana’s synthesis: Vedic fire-ritual and Brahman-abidance are presented as complementary means toward the one Supreme—an approach consistent with the text’s broader Shaiva-Vaishnava non-sectarian theology.