भवद्भिर्नोत्सहे स्थातुं जनस्पर्शविनाकृतः । एवमुक्त्वा ततो देवि समुद्रः सरितांपतिः । आत्मानं शोषयामास दुःखेन महता स्थितः
bhavadbhirnotsahe sthātuṃ janasparśavinākṛtaḥ | evamuktvā tato devi samudraḥ saritāṃpatiḥ | ātmānaṃ śoṣayāmāsa duḥkhena mahatā sthitaḥ
“ข้าหาอาจอยู่ต่อหน้าเจ้าทั้งหลายได้ เมื่อถูกตัดขาดจากการสัมผัสแห่งสรรพชีวิต” ครั้นกล่าวดังนี้แล้ว โอ้เทวี มหาสมุทรผู้เป็นเจ้าแห่งสายน้ำทั้งปวง ก็เริ่มทำตนให้เหือดแห้ง ด้วยความโศกใหญ่ยิ่ง
Narrator (contextual), reporting Samudra’s words and act
Tirtha: Prabhāsa-kṣetra
Type: kshetra
Listener: Devi addressed within the narrative; broader audience is the listening sages
Scene: The Ocean, personified as a majestic deity, speaks to the Goddess and begins to dry himself up; the shoreline recedes, waves stilling, with a palpable aura of sorrow over the coastal tīrtha.
Separation from the world and the burden of curse-induced fate can drive even cosmic beings toward intense penitential transformation.
Prabhāsakṣetra, whose māhātmya frames the ocean’s transformation as part of the tīrtha’s sacred history.
No direct ritual; it depicts tapas-like self-restraint (drying up) as a narrative act.