नाभिर्मेदो यकृन्मज्जा अंत्रमामाशयः शिरा । स्नायुः पक्वाशयश्चैव प्राहुर्वेदविदो द्विजाः
nābhirmedo yakṛnmajjā aṃtramāmāśayaḥ śirā | snāyuḥ pakvāśayaścaiva prāhurvedavido dvijāḥ
السُّرّة، والشحم، والكبد، والنُّخاع، والأمعاء، والمعدة، والعروق؛ وكذلك الأوتار والقولون أيضًا—هكذا يصرّح ذوو الولادتين (dvija) من عارفي الفيدا.
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta) (deduced from Māheśvarakhaṇḍa narrative convention)
Scene: A palm-leaf manuscript scene: dvija scholars recite and point to a diagram of internal organs—navel, liver, marrow, intestines, vessels—presented reverently as sacred knowledge.
Scriptural tradition frames bodily knowledge as part of dharma—right understanding supports right conduct.
None; the verse cites Vedic authorities about the body’s components.
No ritual instruction is present.