Śuka’s Yoga-ascent, the Echo of ‘Bhoḥ’, and the Vaikuṇṭha Vision
यद्रूपं मम दृष्टं प्राक् श्वेतद्वीपे त्वया द्विज । सोऽहमेवावतारार्थं स्थितो विश्वंभरात्मकः ॥ ६८ ॥
yadrūpaṃ mama dṛṣṭaṃ prāk śvetadvīpe tvayā dvija | so'hamevāvatārārthaṃ sthito viśvaṃbharātmakaḥ || 68 ||
噢,二生者,你先前在白洲(Śvetadvīpa)所见之我之形相——正是我自身。如今我为示现降生之故而住于此,以遍持万有、扶持宇宙之本性而安住。
Vishnu (as the Supreme Lord, identifying Himself as the Śvetadvīpa form)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It affirms the continuity of the Lord’s identity across divine visions and historical descents: the same Supreme Being seen in Śvetadvīpa chooses to manifest (avatāra) for the world’s welfare, while remaining the cosmic sustainer (Viśvaṃbhara).
Bhakti is strengthened by recognizing that the worshipped form is not symbolic or separate—the Lord personally reveals and then descends for devotees; remembering His earlier revelation (Śvetadvīpa-darśana) becomes a basis for steady devotion and surrender.
No specific Vedāṅga (like Vyākaraṇa, Jyotiṣa, or Kalpa) is taught directly here; the practical takeaway is theological clarity used in ritual and mantra-upāsanā—one should worship the avatāra as the same Supreme Viṣṇu, Viśvaṃbhara.