मारीचाश्रमगमनम्
Ravana’s Journey to Maricha’s Hermitage
यस्य हस्तिनमादाय महाकायं च कच्छपम्।।।।भक्षार्थं गरुडश्शाखामाजगाम महाबलः।
yasya hastinam ādāya mahākāyaṁ ca kacchapam |
bhakṣārthaṁ garuḍaḥ śākhām ājagāma mahābalaḥ ||
An eben jenem Baum kam einst der mächtige Garuḍa zu einem Zweig, einen Elefanten und eine riesige Schildkröte tragend, um sie zu verzehren.
In the past, the mighty Garuda brought an elephant and a huge tortoise and sat on a branch of this tree to feed on them.
The allusion pairs immense power with appetite, inviting a dharmic reading: strength must be governed by right order and restraint; otherwise power becomes mere predation.
After describing the vast banyan and the sages around it, the narration adds a legendary episode connected with the same tree: Garuḍa once landed there with prey.
Primarily the theme of power (mahābala). In Ramayana ethics, such power is evaluated by whether it aligns with dharma rather than impulse.