Kāṣṭhīla-Upākhyāna: Rākṣasī, Spear-Śakti, and Kāśī as Śakti-kṣetra
विष्णुर्वेश्यासमासक्तः प्रह्लादाद्युपदेशकृत् । श्रीनृसिंहोऽसुरध्वंसी देवदेवाधिदैवतम् ॥ ३६ ॥
viṣṇurveśyāsamāsaktaḥ prahlādādyupadeśakṛt | śrīnṛsiṃho'suradhvaṃsī devadevādhidaivatam || 36 ||
فيشنو—الذي بدافع الرحمة اقترن حتى بغانية، والذي ألقى التعاليم على برهلادا وغيرِه—هو شري نرسِمها، مُهلكُ الأسورا، وهو الألوهية العُليا فوق حتى إلهِ الآلهة.
Narada (within a Vishnu-stuti context; standard Narada Purana dialogue frame places Narada as principal narrator/teacher)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhakti
Secondary Rasa: vira
It proclaims Vishnu (especially as Śrī Nṛsiṁha) as the supreme reality—above all divine hierarchies—who protects devotees, destroys adharma (asuras), and teaches bhakti and right understanding to souls like Prahlāda.
By highlighting Vishnu as both compassionate and corrective: he engages even with socially marginal figures to uplift them, and he personally instructs exemplary devotees like Prahlāda—showing that sincere devotion and divine grace, not mere status, lead toward liberation.
No specific Vedāṅga technique is taught in this verse; the practical takeaway is dharmic discernment—seeing the Lord as the highest refuge (śaraṇāgati) and aligning conduct with devotion, which underpins all ritual and scriptural practice.