Mārkaṇḍeya Ṛṣi Tested by Indra and Blessed by Nara-Nārāyaṇa
तौ शुक्लकृष्णौ नवकञ्जलोचनौ चतुर्भुजौ रौरववल्कलाम्बरौ । पवित्रपाणी उपवीतकं त्रिवृत् कमण्डलुं दण्डमृजुं च वैणवम् ॥ ३३ ॥ पद्माक्षमालामुत जन्तुमार्जनं वेदं च साक्षात्तप एव रूपिणौ । तपत्तडिद्वर्णपिशङ्गरोचिषा प्रांशू दधानौ विबुधर्षभार्चितौ ॥ ३४ ॥
tau śukla-kṛṣṇau nava-kañja-locanau catur-bhujau raurava-valkalāmbarau pavitra-pāṇī upavītakaṁ tri-vṛt kamaṇḍaluṁ daṇḍam ṛjuṁ ca vaiṇavam
Ambos—uno de tez blanca y el otro negruzca—tenían ojos como pétalos de loto recién abierto y cuatro brazos. Vestían piel de ciervo y corteza, con el cordón sagrado de tres hebras; en Sus manos purificadoras llevaban el kamaṇḍalu, un bastón recto y un bambú (vaiṇava).
They are the Supreme Lord manifesting as twin sages at Badarikāśrama, exemplifying perfect tapasya and divine protection, as seen in Mārkaṇḍeya Ṛṣi’s vision.
The verse shows the Lord’s synthesis of renunciation and sovereignty: externally the equipment of a sage (bark, kamaṇḍalu, staff), and inherently divine majesty (four-armed form).
Cultivate purity and discipline (tapasya) while remembering that the goal of renunciation is loving devotion to the Supreme, who is both near as a guide and supreme as the Lord.