Atithi-prāpti and the Brāhmaṇa’s Deliberation on Triadic Dharma (अतिथिप्राप्तिः धर्मत्रयविचारश्च)
त॑ देवो दर्शयामास कृत्वा हयशिरो महत् | साड्नावर्तयन् वेदान् कमण्डलुत्रिदण्डधूक्ू
taṁ devo darśayāmāsa kṛtvā hayaśiro mahat | ṣaḍ-aṅgān āvartayan vedān kamaṇḍalu-tridaṇḍa-dhṛk ||
Vyāsa said: That divine being revealed himself, assuming a great horse-headed form. Bearing a water-pot and the threefold staff, he was reciting the Vedas together with their six auxiliary disciplines—an image of disciplined learning and ascetic restraint made visible to Brahmā.
व्यास उवाच
True authority in dharma is grounded in disciplined Vedic knowledge and ascetic self-restraint: the divine is portrayed not as mere power, but as a teacher who embodies study (Veda with Vedāṅgas) and renunciation (kamaṇḍalu, tridaṇḍa).
Vyāsa narrates a theophany: the deity manifests in the great horse-headed (Hayagrīva) form and appears before Brahmā, reciting the Vedas along with the six Vedāṅgas while holding the ascetic emblems of a water-pot and threefold staff.