नर्मदायाः सुतस्तत्र सशल्यो विशलीकृतः । सर्वदेवैश्च ऋषिभिर्विशल्या तेन सा स्मृता
narmadāyāḥ sutastatra saśalyo viśalīkṛtaḥ | sarvadevaiśca ṛṣibhirviśalyā tena sā smṛtā
Doon, ang anak ni Narmadā na may nakabaong palaso ay ginawang ‘walang palaso’—pinagaling at inalis ang sugat. Kaya’t ng lahat ng mga deva at mga ṛṣi, siya/yaong pook ay inaalala bilang Viśalyā.
Mārkaṇḍeya (continuing narration to Yudhiṣṭhira)
Tirtha: Viśalyā-tīrtha
Type: ghat
Listener: Yudhiṣṭhira
Scene: On the Narmadā bank, a wounded divine/semidivine figure—‘son of Narmadā’—is healed as the embedded arrowhead is removed; devas and sages witness and proclaim the name Viśalyā; the river glows as if medicinal.
A tīrtha is celebrated not only for merit but for grace that removes affliction—symbolized by the removal of the śalya (piercing pain/karma).
Viśalyā tīrtha on/near the Narmadā, named after the miraculous ‘removal of the śalya’ connected with Narmadā’s son.
No direct prescription; the verse provides the name-origin (nāma-nirukti) and the healing miracle associated with the site.