कस्यचित्त्वथ कालस्य तस्य पुत्रो बभूव ह । विरूपस्यापि रूपाढ्यः पूर्वकर्मप्रभावतः
kasyacittvatha kālasya tasya putro babhūva ha | virūpasyāpi rūpāḍhyaḥ pūrvakarmaprabhāvataḥ
ครั้นล่วงกาลไป บุตรคนหนึ่งก็บังเกิดแก่เขา แม้บิดาจะอัปลักษณ์ แต่บุตรงามสง่า ด้วยอานุภาพแห่งกรรมก่อน
Viśvāmitra
Listener: The King
Scene: A handsome son is born to the ill-formed Kumbhaka; the contrast is explicitly attributed to the power of prior deeds, signaling a destined shift in the story.
The verse highlights karma doctrine: present qualities can arise from prior deeds, not merely from visible lineage or appearance.
No specific tīrtha is named; it continues the Vardhamāna-setting backstory within Tīrthamāhātmya.
None; it is a doctrinal-narrative statement about karma’s effects.