अव्यक्त–प्रकृति–इन्द्रियविचारः
The Unmanifest, Prakṛtis, and the Sense-Complex
यथा भानुगतं तेजो मणि: शुद्ध: समाधिना । आदत्ते राजशार्दूल तथा योग: प्रवर्तते
yathā bhānugataṃ tejo maṇiḥ śuddhaḥ samādhinā | ādatte rājaśārdūla tathā yogaḥ pravartate nṛpaśreṣṭha ||
قال باراشارا: «كما أن حجر الشمس النقيّ، بتركيزٍ سليم (سمادهي)، يجتذب الإشعاع القائم في الشمس، كذلك يمضي اليوغا، يا نمرَ الملوك، يا خيرَ الحكّام—فبسمادهي يتلقّى السالك ويُدرك حقيقة براهمان».
पराशर उवाच
Yoga becomes effective through samādhi: when the mind is purified and steadily absorbed, it can ‘receive’ or directly realize the highest reality (Brahman), just as a pure sunstone draws the sun’s radiance.
Parāśara is instructing a king (addressed honorifically as rājaśārdūla/nṛpaśreṣṭha) on the inner mechanics of spiritual practice, using a natural metaphor to explain how concentrated meditation enables realization.