Cosmic Realms Above Dhruva, the Pātālas Below, and the Foundation of Pralaya
Ananta–Kāla
पातालानामधश्चास्ते शेषाख्या वैष्णवी तनुः / कालाग्निरुद्रो योगात्मा नारसिंहो ऽपि माधवः
pātālānāmadhaścāste śeṣākhyā vaiṣṇavī tanuḥ / kālāgnirudro yogātmā nārasiṃho 'pi mādhavaḥ
وتحت عوالم پاتالا (Pātāla) يقوم التجسّد الڤيشناوي المعروف باسم شيشا (Śeṣa). وهو أيضًا كالاگنيرودرا (Kālāgnirudra)—رودرا، نار الزمان—وجوهره اليوغا؛ وهو كذلك ماذافا (Mādhava)، ويظهر أيضًا في هيئة ناراسِمها (Nārasiṁha).
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing in Purāṇic cosmology and the unity of divine forms
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It presents one Supreme reality manifesting through multiple names and functions—support (Śeṣa), dissolution/time-fire (Kālāgnirudra), yogic consciousness (yogātmā), and protective avatāra power (Nārasiṁha)—implying a single Self appearing as many.
No step-by-step practice is listed, but the epithet yogātmā teaches that the divine ground of the cosmos is intrinsically yogic—i.e., established in inward union and mastery—supporting the Kurma Purana’s broader yoga-shāstra tone (later systematized in Ishvara Gita contexts).
By identifying the same divine principle as both Vaiṣṇava (Śeṣa/Mādhava/Nārasiṁha) and Rudra (Kālāgnirudra), it frames Śiva and Viṣṇu as complementary aspects of one Supreme—typical of the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis.