Tīrtha-Māhātmya Sequence: Sacred Fords, Baths, Gifts, and Śrāddha
Narmadā-Belt Itinerary
गजरूपाः शिलास्तत्र तोयमध्ये प्रतिष्ठिताः । तस्मिंस्तु दापयेत्पिंडं वैशाखे तु विशेषतः
gajarūpāḥ śilāstatra toyamadhye pratiṣṭhitāḥ | tasmiṃstu dāpayetpiṃḍaṃ vaiśākhe tu viśeṣataḥ
وہاں پانی کے بیچ ہاتھی کی صورت والی چٹانیں نصب ہیں۔ اسی مقام پر پِنڈ نذر کرنا چاہیے، خصوصاً ماہِ ویشاکھ میں۔
Unspecified (narrative instruction within the Svarga-khaṇḍa context; commonly framed as Pulastya instructing Bhīṣma in this section)
Concept: Sacred geography is encoded in tangible markers; time (Vaiśākha) and place (water-installed śilās) together intensify ritual fruit for pitṛ offerings.
Application: Use ‘anchors’ for remembrance—specific places, dates, and simple rites—to keep gratitude and duty consistent; choose an annual month (like Vaiśākha) for concentrated acts of charity and remembrance.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: tirtha
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"In the middle of clear, waist-deep water, a line of elephant-shaped stones rises like ancient guardians, their contours softened by ripples and moss. A devotee wades carefully to the stones, placing a piṇḍa offering upon a flat ledge while springtime Vaiśākha blossoms drift on the surface.","primary_figures":["a pilgrim performing piṇḍa-dāna","local priests (optional)","pitrs (subtle presences)"],"setting":"shallow river/pool with submerged stone installations shaped like elephants; spring foliage and flowering trees on the banks","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["spring green","river turquoise","stone gray","marigold orange","lotus pink"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: elephant-shaped stone icons emerging from sacred water, gold leaf highlights on ripples and ritual vessels, devotee offering piṇḍa in Vaiśākha with floral garlands, ornate borders, rich reds/greens, stylized waves and lotus motifs, devotional symmetry.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: delicate spring landscape, turquoise water with gentle ripples, elephant-shaped stones rendered with fine shading, a devotee wading with leaf-plate piṇḍa, flowering trees and soft hills, cool palette with warm blossom accents, lyrical naturalism.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlined elephant-stone forms in patterned water, devotee in ritual posture, spring motifs and temple aesthetic, natural pigments with strong greens and yellows, stylized flora and rhythmic composition.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: tīrtha water filled with lotus motifs and ornate borders, elephant-shaped stones as central sacred icons, devotees offering piṇḍas, peacocks and floral garlands indicating Vaiśākha, deep blues/greens with gold detailing and intricate textile patterning."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"reverent-soft","sound_elements":["water ripples","spring birds","priestly murmurs","conch shell (distant)"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: शिलास्तत्र = शिलाः + तत्र; तस्मिंस्तु = तस्मिन् + तु; दापयेत्पिंडं = दापयेत् + पिण्डम्।
It recommends offering a piṇḍa (a śrāddha-related food-ball offering) at a specific sacred spot described as having elephant-shaped stones in the water.
The verse states that the offering is to be done “especially” in Vaiśākha, reflecting the Purāṇic theme that Vaiśākha is a particularly meritorious time for tīrtha-related gifts and ancestral rites.
It emphasizes care for ancestors and the disciplined performance of prescribed rites at sacred places and auspicious times, presenting ritual responsibility as a form of dharma.