Prahlada’s Pilgrimage Circuit: Tirtha-Mahatmya from Naimisha to Rudrakoti and Shalagrama
पद्मनाभं स तत्रर्च्य सप्तगोदावरं ययौ तत्र स्नात्वार्ऽच्य विश्वेशं भीमं त्रैलोक्यवन्दितम्
padmanābhaṃ sa tatrarcya saptagodāvaraṃ yayau tatra snātvār'cya viśveśaṃ bhīmaṃ trailokyavanditam
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{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
This is a characteristic Purāṇic pilgrimage pattern: the yātrā is not sectarian but integrative. The pilgrim honors Viṣṇu (Padmanābha) and then proceeds to a Śaiva tirtha (Viśveśa/Bhīma), presenting tīrtha-travel as a harmonizing practice across major deities.
The compound suggests a Godāvarī sacred zone marked by ‘seven’—commonly interpreted as seven streams/branches, seven confluences, or seven stations of merit along the river. The text treats it as a named tirtha destination where snāna and liṅga-arcana are central.
Both readings are possible in Purāṇic usage. Grammatically it qualifies the deity as ‘mighty/terrible,’ but in many tirtha-catalogues ‘Bhīma’ also functions as a proper name for a particular liṅga revered as ‘worshipped by the three worlds.’