Saptasārasvata-tīrtha-prasaṅgaḥ | The Saptasārasvata Pilgrimage Account and the Maṅkaṇaka Narrative
तत्र गर्गेण वृद्धेन तपसा भावितात्मना
Vaiśampāyana uvāca | tatra gargeṇa vṛddhena tapasā bhāvitātmanā, janamejaya, tatra sarasvatyāḥ śubhe tīrthe kālajñānaṃ kālagatiṃ grahāṇāṃ nakṣatrāṇāṃ ca viparyayaṃ dāruṇānutpātān śubhalakṣaṇāni ca sarvāṇy etāni jñātāni | tasyaiva nāmnā tat tīrthaṃ gargasrota iti khyātam ||
Vaiśampāyana dit : Là, ô Janamejaya, le sage âgé Garga—l’âme intérieure purifiée et affermie par l’ascèse—sur ce gué auspicious de la Sarasvatī parvint à comprendre la science du Temps et le cours du Temps, les renversements et mouvements irréguliers des planètes et des constellations, les présages terribles, ainsi que les signes favorables. De son propre nom, ce lieu sacré fut appelé Gargasrota.
वैशम्पायन उवाच
Austerity and inner purification (tapas, bhāvitātman) are presented as sources of higher discernment: the sage gains insight into Kāla (Time), cosmic order, and the reading of auspicious and inauspicious signs—implying that ethical-spiritual discipline sharpens judgment about events and consequences.
Vaiśampāyana tells Janamejaya that the elder sage Garga, while at an auspicious Sarasvatī tīrtha, mastered knowledge of Time and celestial/omenic phenomena; the place later became famous by his name as Gargasrota.