तत्र विव्याध विशिखैः शार्दूलान्गवयान्मृगान् । रुरून्वराहान्महिषान्मृगेंद्रानपि भूरिशः
tatra vivyādha viśikhaiḥ śārdūlāngavayānmṛgān | rurūnvarāhānmahiṣānmṛgeṃdrānapi bhūriśaḥ
Là, il perça de ses flèches quantité de bêtes—tigres, gayals, cerfs, antilopes, sangliers, buffles, et même de puissants seigneurs parmi les animaux—à maintes reprises.
Narrator (not specified in the excerpt; likely the Purāṇic narrator within Brāhma Khaṇḍa)
Scene: The king looses arrows in rapid succession; animals—tiger, boar, deer, buffalo—depicted in motion amid forest; a sense of relentless repetition and mounting consequence.
The verse intensifies the theme of indulgence in hunting, preparing the ground for karmic reversal or a dharmic turning point.
No holy site is identified in this verse.
None; the verse is purely narrative.