Indratīrtha–Ādityatīrtha: Balarāma’s Ritual Bathing, Dāna, and Sacred-Historical Recollections
तदापतत् पर्णपुटे तत्र सा संभवत् सुता । जप करनेवालोंमें श्रेष्ठ ऋषिने उस वीर्यको अपने हाथमें ले लिया, परंतु वह तत्काल ही एक पफ्त्तेके दोनेमें गिर पड़ा। वहीं वह कन्या प्रकट हो गयी
tadāpatat parṇapuṭe tatra sā saṃbhavat sutā | japakarṇevāleṣu śreṣṭha ṛṣiṇe us vīryako apne hāthameṃ le liyā, parantu vah tatkāl hī ek patteke done meṃ gir paṛā | vahīṃ vah kanyā prakaṭ ho gayī |
तद् वीर्यं पर्णपुटे तत्रापतत्; तत्रैव सा सुता सम्भूता। जपपरायणानां श्रेष्ठो मुनिः स्वहस्ते तद् आदाय, तत्क्षणादेव पर्णकुटिकायां पतितं ददर्श; तस्मादेव देशात् सा कन्या प्रादुरभवत्।
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse highlights that outcomes may arise even from unintended moments, yet within a dharmic frame: ascetic discipline, ritual potency, and destiny can transform an accidental fall into an extraordinary birth, suggesting that moral and spiritual context shapes how events bear fruit.
A sage takes the seed (vīrya) into his hand, but it immediately falls into a leaf-cup (parṇapuṭa). From that very place a daughter/maiden manifests, marking a miraculous or unusual origin story narrated by Vaiśampāyana.