The Merit of Śravaṇa-Dvādaśī and the Liberation of a Preta through Gayā Piṇḍa-Rites
ऋते पिनाकिनो देवात् त्रात्ऽस्मान् न यतो हरे अतो विवृद्धिमगमद् यथा व्याधिरुपेक्षितः
ṛte pinākino devāt trāt'smān na yato hare ato vivṛddhimagamad yathā vyādhirupekṣitaḥ
{"bhagavata_parallel": "Bhāgavata Purāṇa 8.20–8.22 (Bali’s astonishment and praise upon seeing/realizing Trivikrama’s supremacy).", "vishnu_purana_parallel": "Viṣṇu Purāṇa 1.17 (Bali’s realization and submission motifs).", "ramayana_connection": null, "mahabharata_echo": "Nārāyaṇīya/Śānti echoes: addressing Nārāyaṇa as source of worlds; awe before cosmic form.", "other_puranas": ["Harivaṃśa (Trivikrama stuti elements)", "Padma Purāṇa (Vāmana stutis)"], "vedic_reference": "Ṛgveda 10.121 (Hiraṇyagarbha as ‘source/womb’ imagery; conceptual parallel to jagatāṃ yoni)."}
{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The line frames the crisis as requiring supreme divine protection; Śiva is acknowledged as the Pināka-bearing protector, while Hari is directly invoked as the one who will act within this narrative arc (culminating in Viṣṇu’s avatāra intervention). It reflects a Purāṇic idiom where deities are invoked in complementary roles rather than strict sectarian separation.
It depicts unchecked adharma/asuric power as self-amplifying: when not countered by timely dharmic action (divine or royal), it spreads like an untreated illness. The simile justifies the necessity of decisive intervention rather than passive endurance.
No explicit river, lake, forest, or tīrtha is named here; the verse is thematic and rhetorical, setting up the urgency for divine action rather than describing sacred geography.