The Exposition of Nṛsiṁha Worship-Mantras, Nyāsa, Mudrās, Yantras, Kavaca, and Nṛsiṁha Gāyatrī
गजाश्वरथररत्नैश्च ग्रामक्षेत्रधनादिभिः । यदि मन्त्री न तुष्येत तदानर्थो महीपतेः ॥ ७७ ॥
gajāśvarathararatnaiśca grāmakṣetradhanādibhiḥ | yadi mantrī na tuṣyeta tadānartho mahīpateḥ || 77 ||
हत्ती, घोडे, रथ, रत्ने, गावे, शेते, धन इत्यादी देऊनही मंत्री तुष्ट न झाल्यास राजावर अनर्थ येतो।
Narada (teaching in a didactic discourse)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
It frames political harmony as a dharmic necessity: a king’s prosperity depends not merely on wealth or gifts, but on righteous administration and the contentment of trusted counsel.
Indirectly, it teaches that external offerings alone do not create well-being; sincerity and right intention matter—an ethical principle that also underlies genuine bhakti beyond mere material gifting.
It aligns with applied dharma and niti (statecraft) discussed in technical sections of the Purana—practical governance principles rather than ritual detail, emphasizing counsel, administration, and outcomes (anartha vs. welfare).