Nāga-āyatana-darśana-pratīkṣā — The Brāhmaṇa’s Request and Waiting on the Gomatī
नरनारायणो द्रष्ठूं कारणं तद् ब्रवीहि मे । नारदजीने जो अनिरुद्ध-विग्रहमें स्थित हुए जगन्नाथ श्रीहरिका दर्शन किया और पुनः जो वे वहाँसे देवश्रेष्ठ नर-नारायणका दर्शन करनेके लिये उनके पास दौड़े गये
śaunaka uvāca |
nara-nārāyaṇo draṣṭuṁ kāraṇaṁ tad bravīhi me |
havyaṁ kavyaṁ ca satataṁ vidhiyuktaṁ prayujyate |
kṛtsnaṁ tu tasya devastha caraṇāv upatiṣṭhati ||
Śaunaka dit : «Dis-moi la raison de ceci : pourquoi Nārada, après avoir contemplé Hari, Seigneur de l’univers, manifesté sous la forme d’Aniruddha, s’est-il hâté encore d’aller voir les plus éminents sages divins, Nara et Nārāyaṇa ? Car c’est à eux que, sans cesse et selon le rite, sont présentées les offrandes destinées aux dieux (havya) et aux ancêtres (kavya) ; et, en vérité, la totalité de ces offrandes vient se déposer à leurs pieds divins.»
शौनक उवाच
The verse elevates Nara–Nārāyaṇa as supreme recipients of worship: even properly performed offerings to gods and ancestors ultimately culminate at their feet. It frames devotion and ritual as finding their highest fulfillment in the Supreme, approached through the ideal of austere, dharmic sages.
Śaunaka asks for the motive behind Nārada’s movement: after seeing Hari in the Aniruddha form, why does Nārada rush to behold Nara–Nārāyaṇa? The question is grounded in their exalted status—continuous, rule-bound havya and kavya offerings are said to arrive at their divine feet—prompting curiosity about Nārada’s purpose in seeking them.