दृष्टानुभूतमर्थं च यः पृष्टो न विगूहते यथाभूतप्रवादस्तु इत्येतत्सत्यलक्षणम् //
dṛṣṭānubhūtamarthaṃ ca yaḥ pṛṣṭo na vigūhate yathābhūtapravādastu ityetatsatyalakṣaṇam //
إذا سُئِل المرءُ فلم يَكْتُم أمرًا قد رآه أو اختبره بنفسه، بل قاله على ما هو عليه في الواقع—فذلك هو العلامةُ المُعَرِّفة للصدق.
It does not address pralaya directly; it defines satya (truth) as reporting what one has truly seen or experienced without concealment.
It frames truthful testimony as a dharmic duty: a king (in judgment) and a householder (in daily dealings) should not hide known facts when asked, and should speak in accordance with reality (yathābhūta).
No Vāstu or ritual procedure is mentioned; the verse is an ethical rule about truthful speech, relevant indirectly to ritual integrity (truthful vows and declarations).