नारद–शुक संवादः
Impermanence, Svabhāva, and Śuka’s Resolve for Yoga
ततो मामाह भगवानास्यं स्वं विवृतं कुरु । विवृतं च ततो मे5<स्यं प्रविष्टा च सरस्वती
tato mām āha bhagavān āsyaṁ svaṁ vivṛtaṁ kuru | vivṛtaṁ ca tato me ’syaṁ praviṣṭā ca sarasvatī ||
Pagkatapos ay sinabi sa akin ng Mapalad na Panginoon: “O Brahmin, buksan mo ang iyong bibig.” Nang buksan ko ito, si Sarasvatī—ang diyosang sumasagisag sa banal na pananalita—ay pumasok sa akin.
याज़्ञवल्क्य उवाच
True learning is not merely memorized information but a sanctified capacity for right speech and right transmission. Sarasvatī entering signifies that Vedic knowledge is received as an inner empowerment that must be used with discipline, purity, and dharmic responsibility.
Yājñavalkya is instructed by the Blessed Lord to open his mouth; upon doing so, Sarasvatī (the power of sacred speech) enters him. This symbolizes the divine bestowal and authorization of Vedic revelation—specifically the conferral of the Yajurveda in the surrounding narrative tradition.