Jyotiṣa-saṅgraha: Varga-vibhāga, Bala-nirṇaya, Garbha-phala, Āyuḥ-gaṇanā
वीर्याढ्यज्ञार्किसदृष्टैः कोशस्थावहवोगिनः । सितारेज्यार्कचंद्रार्किज्ञांगेशोर्केंदवोऽधिपाः ॥ ५८ ॥
vīryāḍhyajñārkisadṛṣṭaiḥ kośasthāvahavoginaḥ | sitārejyārkacaṃdrārkijñāṃgeśorkeṃdavo'dhipāḥ || 58 ||
Fortalecidos por el valor, por el saber del yajña y por la visión del vidente, quienes están asentados en el “tesoro” (kośa) y quienes cargan el peso del gobierno, así como los que gozan de los frutos asignados, llegan a ser tenidos por soberanos. Del mismo modo, Śita (Venus), las estrellas, Bṛhaspati, el Sol, la Luna, el hijo del Sol (Śani), el Conocedor (Budha), Aṅgiras, y los señores Sol y Luna son mencionados como autoridades.
Narada (in dialogue context with the Sanatkumara brothers, continuing the instructional enumeration)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It frames worldly authority and celestial governance as arising from potency, knowledge, and seer-like insight—implying that karmic administration (who rules, who enjoys results) is not random but ordered through dharma, yajña, and higher vision.
Indirectly, it contrasts administrative/cosmic powers with the higher aim of Moksha-Dharma: knowing that even mighty rulers and planets function under ordained order encourages detachment and motivates devotion to the supreme refuge beyond planetary and karmic control.
The verse points to a jyotiṣa-style outlook—identifying celestial bodies and ‘adhipa’ roles—supporting the Narada Purana’s broader use of Vedic astrology and ritual knowledge (yajña/ijyā) in explaining cosmic order.