रत्नगंगेति नाम्ना सा मणिमाणिक्यभूषिता । एकदा दैवयोगेन देशांतरादुपागतः
ratnagaṃgeti nāmnā sā maṇimāṇikyabhūṣitā | ekadā daivayogena deśāṃtarādupāgataḥ
Man nannte sie Ratnagaṅgā, und sie war mit Juwelen und Edelsteinen geschmückt. Einst kam, durch eine Fügung des Schicksals, jemand aus einem anderen Land herbei.
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa) to the sages (deduced; exact speaker not in snippet)
Scene: The princess Ratnagaṅgā adorned with gems; courtiers admire her; a traveler/ascetic/merchant figure arrives from a distant land, dust of travel on him, carrying a staff or bundle.
Purāṇic history often turns on daivayoga—events that appear sudden are portrayed as karmically and divinely timed.
The Dharmāraṇya region is the narrative backdrop, though this verse itself focuses on a character introduction.
None; the verse introduces Ratnagaṅgā and foreshadows an incoming influence.