Nārada’s Hymn to Viṣṇu
Nāradasya Viṣṇu-stavaḥ
शौनक उवाच । नमः पराय देवाय परस्मात् परमाय च । परावरनिवासाय सगुणायागुणाय च ॥ २१ ॥
śaunaka uvāca | namaḥ parāya devāya parasmāt paramāya ca | parāvaranivāsāya saguṇāyāguṇāya ca || 21 ||
圣者绍那迦曰:我顶礼至上之主——超越一切至高,越过一切彼岸——祂是上界与下界的归依处,亦同时具德相(有相)而又离德相(无相)。
Śaunaka
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhakti
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It opens the discourse with a comprehensive salutation to the Supreme who transcends all ranks of existence, yet also supports all levels of reality—affirming both transcendence (nirguṇa) and accessibility (saguṇa) for devotion and realization.
By addressing the Lord as both saguṇa and aguṇa, the verse legitimizes devotion to a personal form while recognizing the same reality as ultimately attributeless—allowing bhakti to culminate in liberating knowledge without rejecting worship.
The verse mainly conveys Vedāntic theology rather than a specific Vedāṅga practice; practically, it models correct mantra-style address (stuti with precise epithets), aligning with śikṣā (recitation discipline) and vyākaraṇa (compound meanings like parāvara-nivāsa).