Origins of the Maruts — Origins of the Maruts Across the Manvantaras (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)
तद् दृष्ट्वा पुष्करे न्यस्तं प्रत्यैच्छन्त तपोधन मन्यमानास्तदमृतं सदा यौवनलिप्सया
tad dṛṣṭvā puṣkare nyastaṃ pratyaicchanta tapodhana manyamānāstadamṛtaṃ sadā yauvanalipsayā
हे तपोधन! पुष्करात ठेवलेले ते पाहून, ते अमृत आहे असे मानून, सतत यौवनाची लालसा बाळगून त्यांनी ते मिळविण्याची इच्छा केली.
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shringara", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Puṣkara functions as a named tirtha whose sanctity is explained through narrative causation: events occurring 'in Puṣkara' become part of the site’s remembered sacred history, a common Purāṇic strategy for mapping holiness onto geography.
The epithet frames the listener as an authoritative ascetic, signaling that the account is meant to be received as dharma- and tirtha-relevant instruction rather than mere story.
Although amṛta literally denotes the nectar of immortality, here it is used as a mistaken identification—something perceived as life-giving and youth-preserving, setting up the episode’s moral and etiological turn.