Origins of the Maruts — Origins of the Maruts Across the Manvantaras (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)
समारोप्याथ भर्तारं चितायामारुहच्च सा ततो ऽग्निमध्यात् सलिले मांसपेश्यपतन्मुने
samāropyātha bhartāraṃ citāyāmāruhacca sā tato 'gnimadhyāt salile māṃsapeśyapatanmune
Having placed her husband upon the funeral pyre, she too ascended it. Then, from the midst of the fire, a lump of flesh fell into water, O sage.
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A māṃsa-peśī often functions as an embryological or miraculous-birth marker: instead of a normal birth, the narrative introduces an unusual physical token that later develops into a child/being or becomes the seed of a subsequent episode. It signals a turning point rather than a mere gruesome detail.
Fire and water are potent opposites in ritual symbolism. The movement can indicate preservation amid destruction, a transfer of life-potential, or a narrative device to relocate the ‘seed’ into a setting where it can be found, protected, or transformed in later verses.
Not in this verse as given. ‘Salile’ is generic ‘water’; identification of a specific river/lake/tīrtha requires adjacent verses that name the body of water or the locale. In Vāmana Purāṇa, such naming often follows immediately when the geography becomes relevant.