विब्रूत मे यथातथ्यं श्रोतुकामास्म्यतो ह्य् अहम् ते ऽदर्शयन्प्रदेशिन्या तमेव नृपसत्तमम् //
vibrūta me yathātathyaṃ śrotukāmāsmyato hy aham te 'darśayanpradeśinyā tameva nṛpasattamam //
「ありのままの真実を、正確に私に告げなさい。私はそれを聞きたいのです。」すると彼らは、その場所を指し示して、まさにその最上の王を示した。
This verse does not directly discuss Pralaya; it emphasizes truthful narration and the act of being shown a specific person/place within a royal episode.
It underscores a key dharmic principle relevant to rulers and householders alike: seeking and giving information “yathātathyam” (as it truly is), i.e., truthful counsel and reliable testimony in governance and conduct.
No explicit Vastu, temple-building, or ritual procedure appears here; the only technical nuance is “pradeśinyā”—a precise pointing-out of a location, which functions as narrative staging rather than architectural instruction.