वेदो ब्राह्मणरूपेण सावित्री सव्यदक्षिणे । ओंकारोऽथ वषङ्कारः सर्वे रामं तदाऽव्रजन्
vedo brāhmaṇarūpeṇa sāvitrī savyadakṣiṇe | oṃkāro'tha vaṣaṅkāraḥ sarve rāmaṃ tadā'vrajan
Le Veda, sous la forme d’un brāhmane, et Sāvitrī à gauche et à droite; ainsi que Oṃkāra et Vaṣaṭkāra—tous alors accompagnèrent Rāma.
Narrator (within Ayodhyāmāhātmya)
Tirtha: Ayodhyā
Type: kshetra
Scene: Rāma proceeds while Veda appears as a radiant brāhmaṇa; Sāvitrī stands to one side; Oṃkāra and Vaṣaṭkāra appear as luminous syllabic beings or sages formed of script, all accompanying him.
Rāma is portrayed as the living axis of Vedic dharma—Veda, mantra, and sacrificial utterance themselves honor and follow him.
Ayodhyā, celebrated as a city where Vedic revelation and mantric power are vividly present in the sacred history of Rāma.
Implicitly references Vedic practice: Sāvitrī (Gāyatrī), Oṃkāra, and the yajña call Vaṣaṭ—core elements of mantra and sacrifice—though no step-by-step rite is given.