प्रायेण श्रीमदालेपान्नहुषाद्या महानृपाः । स्वर्गं प्राप्यापि पतिताः कः श्रियो विंदते सुखम्
prāyeṇa śrīmadālepānnahuṣādyā mahānṛpāḥ | svargaṃ prāpyāpi patitāḥ kaḥ śriyo viṃdate sukham
حقّاً إن ملوكاً عظاماً مثل نَهُوشَة—كأنهم مطليون ببريق الثراء—سقطوا حتى بعد بلوغهم السماء. فمن ذا الذي يجد السعادة حقّاً بمجرد الحظّ والنعمة؟
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta) to the sages (deduced from Māheśvarakhaṇḍa frame)
Scene: A radiant king (Nahuṣa) enthroned amid celestial splendor, yet a shadow of downfall behind him; sages in the foreground as moral counterweight; the glitter of prosperity depicted as a smear/overlay that cannot protect from descent.
Even heavenly attainment is unstable when pride and attachment remain; lasting happiness is rooted in dharma and self-restraint, not mere prosperity.
No tīrtha is mentioned; the verse uses an itihāsa example (Nahuṣa) for moral instruction.
None directly; the implied practice is humility and righteous conduct to avoid the downfall that follows pride.