नरनारायण-नारदसंवादः
Nara-Nārāyaṇa–Nārada Discourse on Vision, Elements, and Entry into Vāsudeva
सड्रत्या जठरे न्यस्तं रेतोबिन्दुमचेतनम् । केन यत्नेन जीवन्तं गर्भ त्वमिह पश्यसि
striyā jaṭhare nyastaṁ retobindum acetanaṁ | kena yatnena jīvantaṁ garbha tvaṁ iha paśyasi, śukadeva ||
Nārada dit : «Lorsqu’une goutte de semence, dépourvue de conscience, est déposée dans le sein d’une femme, par quel effort devient-elle un embryon vivant ? Ô Śukadeva, t’es-tu jamais demandé comment cet embryon, ici, est maintenu en vie ?»
नारद उवाच
The verse prompts reflection on the mystery of life: an insentient physical seed becomes a living being without any conscious ‘effort’ of its own, pointing to a sustaining principle beyond mere individual agency—often understood in the Mahābhārata’s ethical-philosophical frame as the workings of dharma, karma, and the divine/natural order.
Nārada addresses Śukadeva with a probing question about conception and gestation, using the transformation of an unconscious ‘drop’ into a living embryo as a contemplative device to lead the listener toward deeper inquiry into causality, embodiment, and the forces that sustain life.