इति मात्रा दुःखितया निरस्तः शृणु वंशजः । झषेणापि गृहीतोऽस्मि कालो मेऽत्र महानभूत्
iti mātrā duḥkhitayā nirastaḥ śṛṇu vaṃśajaḥ | jhaṣeṇāpi gṛhīto'smi kālo me'tra mahānabhūt
«Ainsi fus-je rejeté par ma mère affligée—écoute, ô descendant. Je fus même saisi par un grand poisson, et mon séjour là-bas fut vraiment long.»
Narrator within the story (the afflicted person recounting his fate; exact identity not explicit in the snippet)
Listener: Vaṃśaja (descendant)
Scene: The fish-narrator describes being cast out by his grieving mother and then swallowed by an even greater fish; the long passage of time is shown by cycles of moonlight filtering through water and the stillness of captivity.
Suffering and rejection can become the doorway to spiritual destiny; even calamity becomes a stage for divine unfolding.
The tīrtha is part of the Nāgarakhaṇḍa Tīrthamāhātmya setting, but the verse itself does not specify a named location.
None is prescribed in this verse; it is a first-person narrative transition.