Saptasārasvata-tīrtha-prasaṅgaḥ | The Saptasārasvata Pilgrimage Account and the Maṅkaṇaka Narrative
पन्नगेभ्यो भयं तत्र विद्यते न सम पौरव । तत्रापि विधिवद् दत्त्वा विप्रेभ्यो रत्नसंचयान्
Vaiśampāyana uvāca: pannagebhyo bhayaṃ tatra vidyate na sama Paurava | tatrāpi vidhivad dattvā viprebhyo ratnasañcayān ||
Vaiśampāyana said: “O descendant of Puru, in that place there is no fear at all from serpents. There too, after duly giving heaps of jewels to the Brahmins according to prescribed rites, Balarāma set out eastward, where at every step many renowned sacred fords manifested—said to be nearly a hundred thousand in number.”
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The passage highlights dharmic conduct during pilgrimage: fear is dispelled in a sanctified space, and merit is reinforced through vidhivat dāna—proper, rule-governed generosity to Brahmins—showing that sacred travel is paired with ethical giving and ritual discipline.
Vaiśampāyana narrates Balarāma’s continued tīrtha-journey: at a place where serpents pose no danger, Balarāma performs prescribed gifts of jewels to Brahmins and then proceeds eastward, encountering a vast succession of famed tīrthas.