नारद–शुक संवादः
Impermanence, Svabhāva, and Śuka’s Resolve for Yoga
कर्तु शतपथं चेदमपूर्व च कृतं मया । यथाभिलषितं मार्ग तथा तच्चोपपादितम्
kartuḥ śatapathaṃ cedam apūrvaṃ ca kṛtaṃ mayā | yathābhilaṣitaṃ mārgaṃ tathā tac copapāditam, nareśvara! tadantaraṃ mayā bījarūpaṃ praṇavaṃ ca sarasvatī-devīṃ ca sammukhaṃ kṛtvā bhagavat sūryasya kṛpayā śatapathasya racanām ārabdhā | etam apūrva-granthaṃ ca pūrṇaṃ kṛtavān asmi | yaś ca mokṣa-mārgo mama abhīṣṭaḥ sa api bhalībhānti sampāditaḥ ||
ยาชญวลกยะกล่าวว่า “ข้าแต่พระราชา ข้าได้รจนาคัมภีร์ ‘ศตปถะ’ อันไม่เคยมีมาก่อนนี้ และหนทางที่ข้าปรารถนานั้น ข้าก็ได้วางไว้และแสดงไว้ตามประสงค์นั้นเอง”
याज़्ञवल्क्य उवाच
Spiritual knowledge is to be properly established and completed through disciplined composition/teaching, grounded in sacred sound (Oṃ), guided speech and learning (Sarasvatī), and sustained by divine grace (Sūrya). The verse links scholarship and liberation: a true ‘path’ is not merely conceived but responsibly ‘set forth’ and fulfilled toward mokṣa.
Yājñavalkya addresses a king and reports that he has composed an extraordinary work called the Śatapatha and has also articulated the liberation-path he intended. He describes beginning the work by invoking Oṃ and Sarasvatī and relying on the Sun’s grace, and he declares the text and his intended mokṣa-oriented undertaking complete.