Adhyāya 348: Nāga–Nīgabhāryā Saṃvāda on Anger, Hope, and Ethical Response
प्रोष्य वर्षमहस्नं तु नरनारायणाश्रमे । श्रुत्वा भगवदाख्यानं दृष्टवा च हरिमव्ययम्
proṣya varṣam ahasnaṁ tu nara-nārāyaṇāśrame | śrutvā bhagavad-ākhyānaṁ dṛṣṭvā ca harim avyayam ||
毗湿摩波耶那说道:在那罗与那罗延的精舍中住满一年之后,既聆听了关于至福之主的神圣传说,又得瞻见哈利——不坏不灭者——(叙事便从那吉祥的相会处继续展开)。
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse foregrounds the ethical-spiritual value of sustained residence in a holy discipline (āśrama), attentive listening to sacred teaching (ākhyāna), and direct contemplative encounter with the Divine (darśana). It implies that transformation arises through steady practice, receptive hearing, and lived experience of the imperishable reality (avyaya).
Vaiśampāyana marks a transition: someone has spent a full year in the Nara-Nārāyaṇa hermitage, heard a divine account about Bhagavān, and beheld Hari, the imperishable. This sets the stage for what follows—actions or conclusions that flow from that prolonged stay, instruction, and vision.