उत्पलैः सर्वतश्छन्नं सरः सारसशोभितम् । तदगाधजलं दृष्ट्वा स्वयमेव पिनाकधृक् । सब्रह्मविष्णुना सार्द्धं स्नातस्तत्र वृषध्वजः
utpalaiḥ sarvataśchannaṃ saraḥ sārasaśobhitam | tadagādhajalaṃ dṛṣṭvā svayameva pinākadhṛk | sabrahmaviṣṇunā sārddhaṃ snātastatra vṛṣadhvajaḥ
Ang lawa ay natakpan sa lahat ng panig ng mga asul na lotus (utpala) at pinalamutian ng mga sisne. Nang makita ang malalim na tubig nito, ang may tangan ng Pināka (Śiva) mismo—ang may bandilang toro—ay naligo roon kasama nina Brahmā at Viṣṇu.
Narrator (contextual, within Dvārakā Māhātmya dialogue)
Tirtha: Mahādeva-saras
Type: kund
Scene: A deep, lotus-covered lake with blue lotuses and swans; Śiva (Pinākadhṛk, Vṛṣadhvaja) enters the water with Brahmā and Viṣṇu for a sacred bath, radiance reflecting on rippling water.
A tīrtha’s greatness is affirmed by divine participation—when the gods themselves bathe there, the site becomes supremely worthy of human pilgrimage.
The sacred lake later named Mahādeva-saras within the Dvārakā Māhātmya narrative.
Snāna (sacred bathing) in the divinely established lake.