सिंहान्व्याघ्रान्महासर्पाञ्छरभांश्च द्विजोत्तमाः । मृगयासक्तचित्तः स भ्रममाणो महावने
siṃhānvyāghrānmahāsarpāñcharabhāṃśca dvijottamāḥ | mṛgayāsaktacittaḥ sa bhramamāṇo mahāvane
O Bester der Zweimalgeborenen, dem die Jagd das Herz fesselte, irrte er im großen Wald umher—unter Löwen, Tigern, Riesenschlangen und sogar furchtbaren Śarabhas.
Narrator (contextual Purāṇic narrator; specific speaker not explicit in this verse)
Listener: dvijottama (addressed)
Scene: Viśvāmitra, absorbed in hunting, moves through a vast forest where lions and tigers prowl, huge serpents coil, and the legendary śarabha looms—an atmosphere of awe and danger.
Attachment to worldly pursuits (like hunting) leads one to restless wandering, setting the stage for turning toward āśrama-dharma and higher guidance.
This verse is narrative setup within the Tīrthamāhātmya; the specific tīrtha is not named in the śloka itself.
None here; it describes the setting and the king’s hunting-driven wandering.