श्रुत्वार्तनादमिति विश्वनरोपि मोहं हित्वोत्थितः किमिति किंत्विति किंकिमेतत् । उच्चैर्वदन्गृहपतिः क्व समे बहिस्थः प्राणोंतरात्मनिलयः सकलेंद्रियेशः
śrutvārtanādamiti viśvanaropi mohaṃ hitvotthitaḥ kimiti kiṃtviti kiṃkimetat | uccairvadangṛhapatiḥ kva same bahisthaḥ prāṇoṃtarātmanilayaḥ sakaleṃdriyeśaḥ
Entendant ce cri de détresse, Viśvanara aussi rejeta sa torpeur et se dressa d’un bond, s’écriant : «Qu’est-ce donc ? Pourquoi cela ? Qu’est-il arrivé ?» Le maître de maison parla à haute voix : «Où est-il—dehors, sur le sol uni—, lui qui est la vie même, demeurant comme le Soi intérieur, seigneur de tous les sens ?»
Narrator (within Skanda–Agastya dialogue context)
Scene: A startled house-lord rises from stupor at a piercing cry, hands lifted in alarm; behind him a dim interior; outside suggested as a threshold; a subtle halo indicates the ‘inner Self’ theme.
Awakening from delusion begins with attentive hearing and urgent inquiry, turning the mind toward the indwelling Lord.
The chapter sits in the Kāśī-māhātmya stream of the Kāśīkhaṇḍa, though this verse itself is narrative dialogue.
None explicitly; the verse emphasizes awakening, inquiry, and recognition of the inner ruler.