तस्यां सा माधवी जज्ञे अश्ववक्त्रस्वरूपधृक् । तां दृष्ट्वा विकृताकारां सुतां जातां च सुप्रभा । वासुदेवसमायुक्ता विषादं परमं गता
tasyāṃ sā mādhavī jajñe aśvavaktrasvarūpadhṛk | tāṃ dṛṣṭvā vikṛtākārāṃ sutāṃ jātāṃ ca suprabhā | vāsudevasamāyuktā viṣādaṃ paramaṃ gatā
Aus ihr (Suprabhā) wurde Mādhavī geboren, die die Gestalt eines Pferdegesichtigen trug. Als Suprabhā—mit Vasudeva verbunden—die Tochter mit entstelltem Aussehen erblickte, versank sie in tiefsten Kummer.
Sūta
Scene: Interior palace scene: Suprabhā, adorned yet grief-stricken, beholds her newborn daughter Mādhavī with an aśva-vaktra (horse-faced) form; attendants recoil; the mother collapses into sorrow while Vāsudeva stands stunned.
Suffering within family life is acknowledged in dharma-texts, and becomes the ground for seeking divine refuge and sacred remedies.
The verse introduces the problem that will be addressed through sacred action; the tīrtha highlighted later is Hāṭakeśvara-kṣetra.
Not yet; the ritual response (tapas, worship, gifts) appears in subsequent verses.