स वृद्धिं द्रुतमभ्येति शुक्लपक्षे यथोडुराट् । तथाऽसौ शंस्यमानस्तु सर्वलोकैः सुरूपभाक् । दृष्ट्वा कुटुंबकं नित्यं वैराग्यं परमं गतः
sa vṛddhiṃ drutamabhyeti śuklapakṣe yathoḍurāṭ | tathā'sau śaṃsyamānastu sarvalokaiḥ surūpabhāk | dṛṣṭvā kuṭuṃbakaṃ nityaṃ vairāgyaṃ paramaṃ gataḥ
Comme la lune croît rapidement durant la quinzaine claire, ainsi s’éleva-t-il promptement—loué par tous et doté d’une belle apparence. Pourtant, voyant la répétition incessante de la vie de foyer, il atteignit le détachement suprême (vairāgya).
Unspecified (Nāgarakhaṇḍa narrative voice; likely Sūta-like narrator)
Listener: pārthiva (king)
Scene: A handsome man at the height of acclaim stands under a bright waxing moon; behind him, a domestic scene repeats—cradles, quarrels, rituals—prompting a quiet, resolute detachment in his face.
Worldly praise and prosperity can still culminate in vairāgya when one perceives the repetitive, binding nature of household attachment.
This verse continues the Tīrthamāhātmya narrative but does not name a specific tīrtha in the given snippet.
No direct ritual (snāna, dāna, japa) is prescribed in this verse; it emphasizes inner renunciation.