अपि चात्र स्वयं शक्रो जगौ गाथां सुराधिप:
api cātra svayaṃ śakro jagau gāthāṃ surādhipaḥ
Moreover, in this very context, Śakra himself—the lord of the gods—sang a gāthā (a traditional verse), invoking a remembered divine utterance to frame the ensuing counsel with authoritative, ethical weight.
राम उवाच
The verse signals that the guidance to follow is grounded in an authoritative, time-tested maxim: a divine gāthā attributed to Indra. Ethically, it frames the forthcoming instruction as aligned with dharma and traditional wisdom rather than mere personal opinion.
Rāma introduces a remembered episode or precedent: Indra himself once recited a gāthā in this kind of situation. This serves as a transition into quoting that verse, strengthening the persuasive force of the counsel being delivered.