Ārṣṭiṣeṇa’s Siddhi and the Tīrtha-Boons; Sindhudvīpa–Devāpi Brāhmaṇya; Viśvāmitra’s Tapas Begins
महता शिरसा राजन ग्रस्तजड्घो महोदर: । राक्षसस्य महाराज रामक्षिप्तस्य वै पुरा,तदनन्तर हलधारी बलराम औशनसतीर्थमें आये, जिसका दूसरा नाम कपालमोचनतीर्थ भी है। महाराज! पूर्वकालमें भगवान् श्रीरामने एक राक्षसको मारकर उसे दूर फेंक दिया था। उसका विशाल सिर महामुनि महोदरकी जाँघमें चिपक गया था। वे महामुनि इस तीर्थमें स्नान करनेपर उस कपालसे मुक्त हुए थे
vaiśampāyana uvāca |
mahatā śirasā rājan grastajaṅgho mahodaraḥ |
rākṣasasya mahārāja rāmakṣiptasya vai purā |
tad-anantaraṃ haladhārī balarāma auśanasatīrthaṃ samāyāyau, yasya dvitīyaṃ nāma kapālamocanatīrtham api |
mahārāja! pūrvakāle bhagavatā śrīrāmeṇa rākṣaso hatvā dūraṃ kṣiptaḥ; tasya viśālaṃ śiraḥ mahāmuner mahodarasya jaṅghāyāṃ saṃlagnaṃ babhūva |
sa mahāmuniḥ asmin tīrthe snātvā tasmin kapāle mokṣam avāpa |
Vaiśampāyana said: O King, the great sage Mahodara once had his thigh seized and weighed down by a massive skull—the skull of a rākṣasa whom, long ago, Lord Rāma had slain and hurled far away. Thereafter, the plough-bearing Balarāma came to Auśanasa-tīrtha, also known as Kapāla-mocana-tīrtha. There, by bathing at this sacred ford, the sage Mahodara was released from that skull. The episode underscores the purifying power attributed to tīrthas: even the lingering taint of violent contact and inauspicious remnants can be ritually and spiritually resolved through prescribed sacred practice.
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The passage highlights tīrtha-māhātmya: sacred places and prescribed rites (especially bathing) are portrayed as means to remove inauspicious residue and ritual impurity, restoring a person to auspiciousness and dharmic order.
Vaiśampāyana recounts an earlier incident: after Rāma killed and flung a rākṣasa, the rākṣasa’s huge skull became stuck to the sage Mahodara’s thigh. Later Balarāma visits Auśanasa-tīrtha (Kapāla-mocana), and at this place Mahodara is freed from the skull through bathing.