Tīrtha-yātrā: Phalaśruti and Sacred Geography from Lohitya to Prayāga
Pulastya’s Instruction
कुरुश्रेष्ठ! तीर्थयात्री पुरुष शंखिनीतीर्थमें जाकर वहाँ देवीतीर्थमें स्नान करनेसे उत्तम रूप प्राप्त करता है ।। ततो गच्छेत राजेन्द्र द्वारपालमरन्तुकम् । तच्च तीर्थ सरस्वत्यां यक्षेन्द्रस्य महात्मन:
kuruśreṣṭha! tīrthayātrī puruṣaḥ śaṅkhinītīrthaṃ gatvā tatra devītīrthe snānena uttamaṃ rūpaṃ prāpnoti || tato gacchet rājendra dvārapālam arantukam | tac ca tīrthaṃ sarasvatyāṃ yakṣendrasya mahātmanaḥ ||
古拉斯提亚说道:“噢,俱卢之最上者!凡行朝圣之人,前往商迦希尼(Śaṅkhinī)渡口,于女神圣渡(Devī-tīrtha)沐浴,便得最上妙、光辉灿然之身相。其后,噢,大王,当再赴名为‘门卫’(Dvārapāla,亦称阿兰图迦 Arantuka)之圣处。此圣渡在萨拉斯瓦蒂河畔,与伟大的夜叉之主相系。”
घुलस्त्य उवाच
The verse emphasizes the dharmic value of tīrtha-yātrā: disciplined pilgrimage and ritual bathing at sacred fords is portrayed as a means to purification and the attainment of auspicious qualities (here, ‘excellent form’), encouraging ethical self-cultivation through sacred practice.
Ghūlastya continues instructing the king on a sequence of pilgrimage sites: first Śaṅkhinī-tīrtha and the Devī-tīrtha (where bathing yields a boon), then the next destination—Dvārapāla/Arantuka—located on the Sarasvatī and linked with a great Yakṣa-lord.