अहिल्यानाम भार्याऽभूद्रूपे णाप्रतिमा भुवि । तां दृष्ट्वा चकमे शक्रः कामदेववशं गतः
ahilyānāma bhāryā'bhūdrūpe ṇāpratimā bhuvi | tāṃ dṛṣṭvā cakame śakraḥ kāmadevavaśaṃ gataḥ
Elle se nommait Ahilyā, épouse dont la beauté n’avait point d’égale sur la terre. En la voyant, Śakra (Indra) la désira, tombant sous l’emprise de Kāma, le dieu du désir.
Viśvāmitra
Listener: Rājan (King)
Scene: Ahilyā, incomparable in beauty, stands within the quiet āśrama; Śakra watches, struck by desire, with Kāma’s unseen influence implied.
Unchecked desire (kāma) can eclipse discernment, even for the mighty; self-restraint safeguards dharma.
No specific tīrtha is named in this verse; it narrates the moral cause behind later sacred-time/space consequences.
None.