अध्यात्मगतितत्त्वज्ञं क्षांतं शक्तं जितेंद्रियम् । ऋजुं यथार्थ वक्तारं नारदं तं नमाम्यहम्
adhyātmagatitattvajñaṃ kṣāṃtaṃ śaktaṃ jiteṃdriyam | ṛjuṃ yathārtha vaktāraṃ nāradaṃ taṃ namāmyaham
I bow to Nārada—the knower of the truth of the soul’s path, patient and capable, master of the senses, straightforward, and a speaker of things as they truly are.
Indra (Mahendra) — within the cited stotra
Listener: King (nṛpa)
Scene: Nārada as teacher-sage: seated in an āśrama, instructing with calm authority; symbols of sense-mastery (controlled animals or subdued senses) and a luminous path motif representing adhyātma-gati.
Spiritual realization is shown through self-mastery, patience, and uncompromising truthfulness.
No; this is a virtue-centered stotra verse.
None explicitly; it points to sādhana through indriya-jaya (sense-control) and adhyātma-jñāna.