योष्ष्टमासांस्तु शुचिना किरणेनोक्षितं पय: । प्रत्यादत्ते पुनः काले किमाश्चर्यमत: परम्
yoṣṭamāsāṁstu śucinā kiraṇenokṣitaṁ payaḥ | pratyādatte punaḥ kāle kimāścaryamataḥ param ||
Le Nāga dit : «Le lait, touché et mûri durant huit mois par les rayons purs (du soleil), est ensuite rendu de nouveau en son temps. Quelle merveille pourrait être plus grande que celle-ci ?»
नाग उवाच
The verse points to the marvel of natural processes governed by orderly time (kāla): what is taken up and transformed by the sun’s rays is returned in season. It invites humility and reflection—nature itself demonstrates a larger, dependable order beyond human control.
A Nāga speaker offers an example from the natural world—milk being ‘touched’ by pure rays for months and then ‘returned’ in due time—as a rhetorical proof of something astonishing, using the image to strengthen a philosophical point about the world’s wondrous, ordered functioning.