Book 1/Chapter 3/Verse 1-43
On praising the Purânas and on each Vyâsa of every Dvâpara Yuga
1-11. Sûta said :-- “O best of the Munis! I am now
telling you the names of the Purânas, etc., exactly as 1 have heard from
Veda Vyâsa, the son of Satyavati; listen.
The Purâna beginning with "ma" are two in number; those
beginning with “bha” are two; those beginning with “bra" are three; those
beginning with "va” are four; those beginning respectively with “A”, “na”,
“pa”, “Ling”, “ga”, “kû” and “Ska” are one each and “ma” means Matsya Purâna,
Mârkandeya Purâna; “Bha” signifies Bhavisya, Bhâgavat Purânas; “Bra” signifies
Brahmâ, Brahmânda and Brahmâvaivarta Purânas; “va” signifies Vâman, Vayu, Visnu
and Varaha Purânas; “A” signifies Agni Purâna; “Na” signifies Narada Purâna;
“Pa” signifies Padma Purâna; “Ling” signifies Linga Purânam; “Ga” signifies
Govinda Purânam; Kû signifies Kurma Purâna and “Ska” signifies Skanda Purânam.
These are the eighteen Purânas. O Saunaka! In the Matsya Purâna there are
fourteen thousand slokas; in the wonderfully varied Markandeya Purânam there
are nine thousand slokas. In the Bhavisya Purâna fourteen thousand and five
hundred slokas are counted by the Munis, the seers of truth. In the holy
Bhâgavata there are eighteen thousand S’lokas; in the Brahmâ Purâna there are
Ajuta (ten thousand) S’lokas. In the Brahmânda Purâna there are twelve
thousand one hundred S’lokas; in the Brahmâ Vaivarta Purânam there are eighteen
thousand S’lokas. In the Vaman Purâna there are Ajuta (ten thousand)
S’lokas; in the Vayu Purânam there are twenty-four thousand and six hundred
S’lokas; in the greatly wonderful Visnu Purâna there are twenty-three
thousand S’lokas; in the Agni Purânam there are sixteen thousand S’lokas; in
the Brihat Narada Purânam, there are twenty-five thousand S’lokas, in the
big Padma Purâna there are fifty-five thousand s'lokas; in the voluminous Linga
Purâna eleven thousand s’lokas exist; in the Garuda Purânam spoken by Hari
nineteen thousand s'lokas exist; iu the Kurma Purâna, seventeen thousand
s'lokas exist and in the greatly wonderful Skanda Purâna there are eighty-one
thousand s'lokas, O sinless Risis! Thus I have described to you the names of
all the Purânas and the number of verses contained in them.
Now hear about the Upa Purânas.
12-17. The first is the Upapurâna narrated by Sanat Kumâra;
next comes Narasimha Purâna; then Naradiya Purâna, S’iva Purâna, Purâna
narrated by Durvasa, Kapila Purâna, Manava Purâna, Aus’anasa Purâna, Varuna
Purâna. Kalika Purâna, Samva Purâna, Nandi Kes’wara Purâna, Saura Purâna,
Purâna spoken by Parâs’ara, Âditya Purâna, Mahesvara Purâna, Bhâgavata and
Vasistha Purâna. These Upa Purânas are described by the Mahatmas.
After compiling the eighteen Purânas, Veda Vyâsa, the son of
Satyavati composed Mahabharata, that has no rival, out of these Purânas.
18-24. At every Manvantara, in each Dvâpara Yuga, Veda Vyâsa
expounds the Purânas duly to preserve the religion. Veda Vyâsa is no other
person than Visnu Himself; He, in the form of Veda Vyâsa, divides the (one)
Veda into four parts, in every Dvâpara Yuga, for the good of the world.
The Brahmânas of the Kali age are shortlived and their intellect (Buddhi)
is not sharp; they cannot realise the meaning after studying the Vedas; knowing
this in every Dvâpara Yuga Bhagavân expounds the holy Purâna Samhitas. The
more so because women, S’udras, and the lower Dvijas are not entitled to hear
the Vedas; for their good, the Purânas have been composed. The present
auspicious Manvantara is Vaivasvata; it is the seventh in due order; and the
son of Satyavati, the best of the knowers of Dharma, is the Veda Vyâsa of the
28th Dvâpara Yuga of this seventh Manvantara. He is my Guru; in the next
Dvâpara, Yuga Asvatthama, the son of Drona will be the Veda Vyâsa.
Twenty-seven Veda Vyâsas had expired and they duly compiled each
their own Purâna Samhitas in their own Dvâpara Yugas.
25-35. The Risis said :-- “O highly fortunate Sûta! kindly
describe to us the names of the previous Veda Vyâsas, the reciters of the
Purânas in the Dvâpara Yugas.
Sûta said :-- In the first Dvâpara, Brahmâ Himself divided the
Vedas; in the second Dvâpara, the first Prajapati Vyâsa did the same; so
S’akra, in the third, Brihaspati, in the fourth, Surya in the fifth; Yama, in
the sixth, Indra, in the seventh, Vasistha, in the eighth; Sarasvata Risi in
the ninth, Tridhama, in the tenth; Trivrisa, in the eleventh, Bharadvâja, in
the twelfth; Antariksa, in the thirteenth; Dharma, in the fourteenth; Evaruni
in the fifteenth; Dhananjaya, in the sixteenth; Medhatithi in tba seventeenth;
Vrati, in the eighteenth; Atri, in the nineteenth; Gautama in the twentieth,
Uttama, whose soul was fixed on Hari, in the twenty-first, Vâjasravâ Vena, in
the twenty second; his family descendant Soma in the twenty-third; Trinavindu,
in the twenty-fourth; Bhârgava, in the twenty-fifth; Sakti, in the
twenty-sixth, Jâtûkarnya in the twenty-seventh and Krisna Dvaipâyana became the
twenty-eighth Veda Vyâs in the Dvâpara Yugas. Thus I have spoken of the
28 Veda Vyâsas, as I heard.
1 have heard the holy S’rimad Bhâgavat from the month of Krisna
Dvaipayana. This removes all troubles, yields all desires, and gives
Moksa and is full of the meanings of the Vedas. This treatise contains
the essence of all the S’astras and is dear always to the Mamuksas (those who
want Moksa or liberation).
36-43. O best Munis! Thus, compiling the Purânas Veda
Vyâsa thought this Purâna to be the best; so (without teaching it to other
persons) he settled that his own son the high-sould S’uka Deva born of the dry
woods used for kindling fire (excited by attrition), having no passion for the
worldly things, would be the fit student to be taught this Purâna and therefore
taught him; at that time I was a fellow student along with S’aka Deva and I
heard everything from the mouth of Vyâsa Deva and realised the secret meanings
thereof. This has happened through the grace of the merciful Guru Veda
Vyâsa.
Here ends the Third Chapter of S’rimad Devi Bhâgavatam on praising
the Purânas and on each Vyâsa of every Dvâpara Yuga.
Source: Translation of The Srimad Devi Bhagvatam by Swami Vijnanananda
No comments:
Post a Comment