Jambūdvīpa Varṣas, Bhārata as Karmabhūmi, and the Sacred Hydro-Topography of Dharma
स्फाटिकैर्मण्डपैर्युक्तं देवराजगृहोपमम् / स्वर्णस्तम्भसहस्त्रैश्च सर्वतः समलङ्कृतम्
sphāṭikairmaṇḍapairyuktaṃ devarājagṛhopamam / svarṇastambhasahastraiśca sarvataḥ samalaṅkṛtam
بلوریں منڈپوں سے آراستہ، دیوراج اندَر کے محل کے مانند؛ اور ہزاروں سونے کے ستونوں سے ہر سمت خوب مزین تھا۔
Vyasa (narrating to the sages)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Indirectly: by portraying a deva-like splendor, the verse contrasts worldly-divine magnificence with the higher Purāṇic aim—turning the mind from external grandeur toward the inner reality that transcends even Indra’s palace.
No specific technique is taught in this line; it serves as a contemplative support (ālambana) where sacred beauty steadies attention, preparing the mind for dhyāna and devotion that later culminate in Kurma Purana’s Yoga-shāstra themes.
Not explicitly; however, the Kurma Purana’s broader Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis frames such divine splendor as belonging to the one sacred order upheld by Hari and Hara, with deva-kingship (Indra) subordinate to the Supreme.