Janaka’s Quest for Liberation; Pañcaśikha’s Sāṅkhya on Renunciation, Elements, Guṇas, and the Deathless State
इष्टिमंत्रेण संयुक्तो भूयश्च तपसासुरिः । क्षेत्रक्षेत्रज्ञयोर्व्यक्तिं विबुधे देहदर्शनः ॥ १४ ॥
iṣṭimaṃtreṇa saṃyukto bhūyaśca tapasāsuriḥ | kṣetrakṣetrajñayorvyaktiṃ vibudhe dehadarśanaḥ || 14 ||
အိဋ္ဌိမန်တရနှင့် ပြည့်စုံပြီး၊ ထပ်မံ၍ တပသဖြင့် အားကောင်းလာသော အာဆုရီရဟန္တသည် ကိုယ်ခန္ဓာ၏သဘောကို တိုက်ရိုက်မြင်သိခြင်းအားဖြင့် က్షೇತ್ರ (လယ်ပြင်) နှင့် က్షेत्रज्ञ (လယ်ပြင်ကိုသိသူ) တို့၏ ခွဲခြားချက်ကို ထင်ရှားစွာ နားလည်하였다။
Narada
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It highlights moksha-oriented discernment: by mantra-discipline and tapas one gains clear knowledge of the body as kṣetra (field) and the Self as kṣetrajña (knower), which is foundational for liberation.
While primarily jñāna-focused, it supports bhakti by purifying the practitioner through sacred mantra and austerity—making the mind fit for steady devotion and God-centered contemplation beyond bodily identity.
It implies disciplined mantra-application in ritual context (iṣṭi), aligning with Vedanga concerns like Śikṣā (correct recitation) and Kalpa (ritual procedure), used here as aids to inner discrimination.