Sapta-dvīpa Cosmography and the Vision of Śvetadvīpa–Vaikuṇṭha
हेमगोपुरसाहस्त्रैर्नानारत्नोपशोभितैः / शुभ्रास्तरणसंयुक्तं विचित्रैः समलङ्कृतम्
hemagopurasāhastrairnānāratnopaśobhitaiḥ / śubhrāstaraṇasaṃyuktaṃ vicitraiḥ samalaṅkṛtam
அது ஆயிரக்கணக்கான பொன் கோபுரங்களால் அலங்கரிக்கப்பட்டது; பலவகை ரத்தினங்களால் ஒளிர்ந்தது; மாசற்ற வெண்மையான ஆஸ்தரணங்களுடன், வண்ணமயமான ஆபரணங்களால் அழகுபடுத்தப்பட்டது।
Narrator (Purāṇic narrator describing the scene; traditionally Sūta recounting to sages)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shringara
This verse does not directly define Ātman; it uses sacred aesthetic imagery—radiance, purity, and ordered beauty—to frame a divine setting in which higher teachings about the Self and dharma are later communicated.
No specific yoga technique is taught in this line; instead, it establishes a purified, auspicious environment (śubhra-āstaraṇa, jewel-like splendor) that supports devotion, concentration, and receptivity—preconditions often assumed in Purāṇic yoga and worship contexts.
The verse is architectural and descriptive rather than doctrinal; indirectly, the shared Purāṇic motif of a radiant sacred abode can serve as a neutral, unifying devotional backdrop consistent with the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis.