ततो दिक्षु दिगन्तेषु गगने धरणीतले । तमेकं चैव पश्यामि नान्यत्किंचिद्द्विजोत्तमाः
tato dikṣu diganteṣu gagane dharaṇītale | tamekaṃ caiva paśyāmi nānyatkiṃciddvijottamāḥ
ثم بعد ذلك، في الجهات كلها وفي آفاقها—في السماء وعلى وجه الأرض—لا أرى إلا إيّاه، الواحد؛ ولا شيئًا سواه البتّة، يا أفضلَ ذوي الولادتين.
Unspecified first-person speaker addressing brāhmaṇas (dvijottamāḥ)
Type: kshetra
Listener: dvijoत्तamāḥ
Scene: A seer stands with open gaze; the ten directions, sky, and earth are filled with a single radiant presence—one deity-form repeating seamlessly across the panorama.
It teaches ekatva-darśana—perceiving the One Reality everywhere as the fruit of sustained meditation.
No specific tīrtha is named in this verse.
None explicitly; it describes the result of practice—unitive perception.