जेपुर्जप्यं मुनिवरा व्याधविद्धा मृगा इव । जहुः कांतिं च सूर्याद्या नीहाराश्छांदयन्दिशः
jepurjapyaṃ munivarā vyādhaviddhā mṛgā iva | jahuḥ kāṃtiṃ ca sūryādyā nīhārāśchāṃdayandiśaḥ
أسرع خِيارُ الحكماء في تلاوة الجَپا المقدّسة، كغزلانٍ أصابها سهمُ الصيّاد. وخبا نورُ الشمس وسائر الأنوار، وحجبت ضفافُ الضباب الجهات.
Narrator (Sūta/Lomaharṣaṇa tradition)
Listener: Pṛthāsuta (addressed in adjacent verse) / epic-audience
Scene: Sages, startled like wounded deer, quicken their japa; the sun’s brilliance fades; mist curtains the horizons, swallowing the directions.
In times of cosmic disturbance, the sages respond with japa—showing mantra as a stabilizing dharmic refuge.
No tīrtha is specified; the verse highlights the rishis’ spiritual response rather than a pilgrimage location.
Japa (muttered recitation) is explicitly referenced as the sages’ practice in response to ominous signs.