ब्रह्मोवाच । न पुण्यं केवलं राजन्गुप्तं स्वर्गस्य साधकम् । विना निष्कल्मषां कीर्ति त्रिलोकीतलविस्तृताम्
brahmovāca | na puṇyaṃ kevalaṃ rājanguptaṃ svargasya sādhakam | vinā niṣkalmaṣāṃ kīrti trilokītalavistṛtām
Wika ni Brahmā: “O hari, ang kabutihan lamang—lalo na kung ito’y nakatago—ay hindi sapat na mag-isa upang makamit ang langit, kung wala ang malinis at walang dungis na karangalang lumalaganap sa tatlong daigdig.”
Brahmā (identified by ‘brahmovāca’)
Listener: Indradyumna
Scene: Brahmā explains with calm precision: a balance-scale motif of ‘puṇya’ versus ‘niṣkalmaṣā kīrti’ spanning the three worlds; the king listens, chastened.
Purāṇic dharma values not only inner merit but also blameless, publicly beneficial conduct that becomes ‘kīrti’—a moral force in the world.
No specific tīrtha is mentioned; the verse teaches a general dharma principle relevant to kings and householders.
None; it is a doctrinal statement about the conditions supporting heavenly attainment.