Arjuna meets the Lokapālas, is tested by Indra, and is led to Amarāvatī for astra-śikṣā
Indraloka-gamana
देशं विरजसं पश्य मेरो: शिखरमुत्तमम् । यत्रात्मतृप्तैर ध्यास्ते देवे: सह पितामह:
deśaṁ virajasaṁ paśya meroḥ śikharam uttamam | yatrātmatṛptair adhyāste devaiḥ saha pitāmahaḥ ||
Vaiśampāyana sprach: „Yudhiṣṭhira, sieh jene makellose, staublose Gegend—den höchsten Gipfel des Berges Meru. Dort weilt der Ahnvater Brahmā zusammen mit den Göttern, die in sich selbst Genüge finden.“
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse links spiritual elevation with virajastva—freedom from rajas (agitation, passion, impurity)—and praises ātma-tṛpti, contentment rooted in the Self. The highest abode is portrayed as a realm of inner sufficiency rather than desire-driven striving.
Vaiśampāyana describes to Yudhiṣṭhira a vision/description of Mount Meru’s supreme summit, identifying it as a pure, rajas-free region where Brahmā (the Pitāmaha) resides along with self-contented gods.