तस्मादुदङ्मुखो गच्छ यत्र ते जलपक्षिणः । दृश्यंते व्योममार्गेण प्रगच्छतः समंततः
tasmādudaṅmukho gaccha yatra te jalapakṣiṇaḥ | dṛśyaṃte vyomamārgeṇa pragacchataḥ samaṃtataḥ
فاذهب إذن متوجّهًا بوجهك نحو الشمال، إلى الموضع الذي تُرى فيه طيور الماء؛ فهي تمضي في مسالك السماء وتطير مُحلِّقةً من كل جانب.
Māṃsāda (implied continuation)
Listener: Mahārāja (king)
Scene: A guide instructs the king to walk facing north; overhead, flocks of water-birds wheel across the sky, indicating the direction toward the reservoir.
In tīrtha narratives, nature itself becomes a guide—signs like birds and directions lead seekers toward sanctified spaces.
The verse points toward a lake-region indicated by water-birds; the tīrtha name is not specified here.
No direct ritual is given; it provides route guidance (go north) as part of the pilgrimage storyline.