Ācamana-vidhi, Śauca, and Conduct Rules for Study, Eating, and Bodily Functions
चत्वरं वा श्मशानं वा समाक्रम्य द्विजोत्तमः / संध्ययोरुभयोस्तद्वदाचान्तो ऽप्याचमेत् पुनः
catvaraṃ vā śmaśānaṃ vā samākramya dvijottamaḥ / saṃdhyayorubhayostadvadācānto 'pyācamet punaḥ
Если лучший из дважды-рождённых ступит на перекрёсток или на место кремации, то в обе сандхьи — утреннюю и вечернюю — он должен так же совершить ачаману; даже если уже отпил очищающую воду, пусть отпьёт снова.
Traditional Purāṇic narrator instructing dharma/ācāra (within the Kurma Purana’s didactic discourse)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Directly it does not define Ātman; it teaches the preparatory discipline (śauca) that steadies the mind for sandhyā practice, which in the Kurma Purana supports higher contemplations that culminate in Self-knowledge.
It emphasizes sandhyā observance supported by ritual purification (ācamana). In the Kurma Purana’s broader Shaiva-Vaishnava synthesis, such outer purity functions as a prerequisite for mantra-japa, breath-regulation, and meditative steadiness aligned with Pāśupata-oriented discipline.
This verse is primarily about dharmic conduct, not deity identity. Indirectly, it reflects the Purana’s integrative approach: shared Vedic purity-and-sandhyā norms underpin devotion and yoga directed to the one Supreme honored as both Hari (Vishnu/Kurma) and Hara (Shiva) in the text’s wider theology.