Bhāgīratha’s Bringing of the Gaṅgā
शालतालतमालाढ्यं नूनहिन्तालमण्डितम् । मालतीयूथिकाकुन्दचम्पकाश्वत्थभूषितम् ॥ ६ ॥
śālatālatamālāḍhyaṃ nūnahintālamaṇḍitam | mālatīyūthikākundacampakāśvatthabhūṣitam || 6 ||
彼处繁茂于娑罗(śāla)、多罗(tāla)与多摩罗(tamāla)诸树,又以高耸的欣多罗棕(hintāla)为饰;更因茉莉蔓(mālatī、yūthikā)、栀子(kunda)与金香木花(campaka)而增妍,并点缀以神圣的阿湿婆他树(aśvattha)。
Suta (narrator)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
The verse sanctifies the setting by portraying a pure, auspicious grove filled with revered trees and fragrant flowers—an external sign of a dhārmic, sattvic space suitable for tapas, teaching, and sacred narration.
Though not prescribing a bhakti practice directly, it frames devotion through sacred ambience: such tīrtha-like landscapes support śravaṇa (hearing) and smaraṇa (remembrance) of the divine, which are core bhakti disciplines in Purāṇic tradition.
No specific Vedāṅga (like Vyākaraṇa, Jyotiṣa, or Kalpa) is taught in this line; it functions as a descriptive nidarśana (scene-setting) commonly used before instruction, ritual detail, or dharma exposition.