न मे सरस्वती देवी जिह्वाग्रे परिवर्तते । कारणं नान्यदस्तीह मृत्योर्मम वरानने । दृष्टोऽकस्मात्त्वया चाहं ततो यास्यामि चान्यतः । मरणं हि मम श्रेयो मूकभावान्न जीवितम्
na me sarasvatī devī jihvāgre parivartate | kāraṇaṃ nānyadastīha mṛtyormama varānane | dṛṣṭo'kasmāttvayā cāhaṃ tato yāsyāmi cānyataḥ | maraṇaṃ hi mama śreyo mūkabhāvānna jīvitam
“For me, the goddess Sarasvatī does not move upon the tip of my tongue. There is no other cause here for my longing for death, O fair-faced one. I have been seen by you unexpectedly—therefore I shall go elsewhere. For death is better for me than living in a state of muteness.”
Piṇḍodaka
Type: kshetra
Scene: A grief-stricken brāhmaṇa (Piṇḍodaka) stands on Arbuda’s sacred slope, head bowed, confessing that Sarasvatī does not move on his tongue; the atmosphere is twilight, with a hint of the goddess’s unseen presence.
Speech and knowledge are sacred gifts; when they are absent, the seeker should turn to divine refuge rather than sink into hopelessness.
The Arbuda setting where Sarasvatī is present; the dialogue leads to the establishment and fame of a tīrtha.
None directly; the verse articulates the motive that prompts Sarasvatī to grant a boon and later prescribe tīrtha-snāna.