एतेन पयसा विद्मो दुर्जनः सुजनो यथा । केचिद्रक्तनदीनां च तीरेष्वास्तिक्यबुद्धयः
etena payasā vidmo durjanaḥ sujano yathā | kecidraktanadīnāṃ ca tīreṣvāstikyabuddhayaḥ
‘एतेनैव पयसा वयं विद्मः दुर्जनः सुजनो यथा।’ केचिद् रक्तनदीनां तीरेषु आस्तिक्यबुद्धयः स्थिताः॥
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta) to the sages (deduced from Māheśvara-khaṇḍa context)
Scene: A horrific landscape with streams like rivers of blood; on their banks stand a few calm, pious-minded figures—hands folded, eyes lowered—while others nearby revel or recoil, making the moral contrast visible.
Conduct reveals character: even in dreadful circumstances, the virtuous retain faith and restraint while the wicked revel in impurity.
No named tirtha appears; “rivers of blood” is metaphorical/narrative imagery.
None explicitly, though it hints at ‘āstikya’ (pious disposition) as a dharmic ideal.