नारीणां तु सदा कामो ह्यधिकः परिवर्तते । विशेषेण ऋतोः काले भिद्यते कामसायकैः
nārīṇāṃ tu sadā kāmo hyadhikaḥ parivartate | viśeṣeṇa ṛtoḥ kāle bhidyate kāmasāyakaiḥ
Bei Frauen, so heißt es, ist das Begehren stets stärker und kehrt immer wieder; besonders zur Zeit der Fruchtbarkeit wird es aufgewühlt, als wäre es von Liebespfeilen getroffen.
Narrator of Revā Khaṇḍa (deduced; explicit speaker not in snippet)
Scene: A woman in a springtime grove feels the stirring of desire; Kāma’s unseen arrows are symbolized by floral darts; the scene is framed as moral psychology rather than celebration.
It contextualizes household ethics by describing ṛtukāla as a time of heightened desire, implying the need for dharmic sensitivity and responsibility.
No particular tīrtha is named; the verse sits within the Revā Khaṇḍa’s Narmadā-centered discourse.
No ritual is stated; it provides explanatory background for the preceding dharma instruction.