Atithi-prāpti and the Brāhmaṇa’s Deliberation on Triadic Dharma (अतिथिप्राप्तिः धर्मत्रयविचारश्च)
ते सहस्रार्चिषं देवं प्रविशन्तीह शुश्रुम । ब्रह्म! परंतु आपने मोक्षको परम शान्ति एवं परम सुखस्वरूप बताया है। जो मुक्त होते हैं
te sahasrārciṣaṃ devaṃ praviśantīha śuśruma | brahma! paraṃ tu āpne mokṣaṃ paramaśāntiṃ evaṃ parama-sukha-svarūpaṃ vaktum ārabdhavān asi | ye muktāḥ, te puṇya-pāpa-rahitāḥ sahasra-kiraṇaiḥ prakāśamāne bhagavati nārāyaṇe deve praviśanti—iti mayā śrutam | tataḥ tiṣye ’tha samprāpte yuge kali-puraskṛte | ekapāda-sthito dharmo yatra tatra bhaviṣyati ||
Janamejaya said: “We have heard that the liberated enter that divine Lord of a thousand flames. O Brahman, you have described liberation as the highest peace and the very form of supreme bliss. I have also heard that those who become free—purged of both merit and sin—merge into the radiant Lord Nārāyaṇa, shining with countless rays. And thereafter, when the age of Kali begins under the Puṣya (Tiṣya) asterism, Dharma will remain standing on only one foot, appearing only here and there.”
जनमेजय उवाच
Liberation is portrayed as supreme peace and bliss, where the liberated transcend both merit and sin and enter/merge into the radiant Lord Nārāyaṇa; in contrast, the onset of Kali Yuga is marked by a drastic decline of Dharma, which survives only in a diminished, sporadic form.
Janamejaya addresses a Brahmanical sage, recalling what he has heard about the destiny of the liberated (entry into the thousand-rayed Lord) and then shifts to a prophetic note about the coming of Kali Yuga under the Puṣya (Tiṣya) asterism, when righteousness will largely wane.