Śrāddha-Kāla-Nirṇaya: Proper Times, Nakṣatra Fruits, Tīrtha Merit, and Offerings for Ancestral Rites
गङ्गायामक्षयं श्राद्धं प्रयागे ऽमरकण्टके / गायन्ति पितरो गाथां कीर्तयन्ति मनीषिणः
gaṅgāyāmakṣayaṃ śrāddhaṃ prayāge 'marakaṇṭake / gāyanti pitaro gāthāṃ kīrtayanti manīṣiṇaḥ
Trên sông Gaṅgā, lễ śrāddha dâng tổ tiên trở nên phước quả bất tận; tại Prayāga và Amarakantaka, chính các bậc Tổ phụ cất lên khúc kệ thiêng, và người hiền trí xưng tán công đức ấy.
Sūta (narrator) speaking to the sages (Naimiṣāraṇya frame)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Indirectly: it emphasizes dharma through tīrtha and śrāddha as purifying supports; the ‘akṣaya’ fruit points to enduring spiritual merit that aids inner purification, which in the Kurma Purana framework prepares one for Self-knowledge.
No explicit yogic technique is taught in this verse; it highlights karma-yoga in the form of pitṛ-yajña (śrāddha) performed at powerful tīrthas, a discipline that steadies the mind through reverence, gratitude, and ritual purity—supportive to later yoga and jñāna.
Not directly; the verse is tīrtha- and pitṛ-centered. In the Kurma Purana’s broader Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis, such dharma practices are upheld as universally valid means of purification under the one supreme reality revered through both Śiva and Viṣṇu traditions.