Prahlada’s Pilgrimage Circuit: Tirtha-Mahatmya from Naimisha to Rudrakoti and Shalagrama
तत्र देववरं शंभुं गोपालं सोमपायिनम्. दृष्ट्वा स्नात्वा सोमतीर्थे सह्याचलमुपागतः
tatra devavaraṃ śaṃbhuṃ gopālaṃ somapāyinam. dṛṣṭvā snātvā somatīrthe sahyācalamupāgataḥ
{"primary_rasa": "shanta", "secondary_rasa": "bhakti", "intensity": 6, "emotional_arc": "ritual purification → devotional worship → ancestral propitiation → onward pilgrimage resolve", "mood_keywords": ["snana", "shuddhi", "bhakti", "pitri-tarpana", "tirtha-yatra", "niyama"]}
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
In tīrtha-māhātmyas, epithets can be strongly local and functional. ‘Gopāla’ can denote ‘protector’ (of cattle/communities) and may reflect a regional Śiva shrine where Śiva is worshipped as a pastoral guardian, showing fluidity of divine titles across sectarian lines.
Soma-tīrtha is a named sacred bathing spot. ‘Snāna’ at such a tīrtha is presented as ritually purifying and merit-producing, often linked to healing, expiation, and eligibility for further pilgrimage stages.
Sahya-acala (the Sahya/Western Ghats) is a major physiographic landmark used in Purāṇic geography to anchor routes and sacred regions. Its mention indicates the pilgrimage’s transition into (or toward) a mountain-based sacred landscape beyond the immediate tīrtha node.