Jyotiṣa-saṅgraha: Varga-vibhāga, Bala-nirṇaya, Garbha-phala, Āyuḥ-gaṇanā
मित्रो पकारकृच्छत्रे कूटे चानृतबंधराट् । तौजः सकीर्तिः सुखभाक् मानवो भवति ध्रुवम् ॥ १९८ ॥
mitro pakārakṛcchatre kūṭe cānṛtabaṃdharāṭ | taujaḥ sakīrtiḥ sukhabhāk mānavo bhavati dhruvam || 198 ||
من كان صديقًا صادقًا وصانعًا للمعونة، لا يلجأ إلى الخداع ولا يصير سيّدًا للكذب—فإنه لا محالة يُرزَق قوةً وسمعةً طيبةً وسعادةً.
Narada (teaching in the Moksha-Dharma context, traditionally within Narada–Sanatkumara dialogue framing)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It links inner purity (truthfulness and non-deceit) with outer and inner results—tejas (inner radiance/strength), kīrti (good repute), and sukha (well-being)—showing that Moksha-Dharma begins with ethical integrity.
Bhakti is sustained by satya and straightforward conduct; a devotee who is helpful and free from deceit becomes fit for steady devotion, because truth and compassion remove the mental knots that obstruct remembrance of the Divine.
No specific Vedanga technique is taught here; the practical takeaway is dharmic discipline—truthful speech and avoidance of fraud—which supports all Vedic practice, including mantra-japa and ritual purity.