Nine Creations (Sarga), Guṇa-Streams of Beings, and Brahmā’s Progeny in Cyclic Time
यथर्तावृतुलिङ्गानि नानारूपाणि पर्यये / दृश्यन्ते तानि तान्येव तथा भावा युगादिषु
yathartāvṛtuliṅgāni nānārūpāṇi paryaye / dṛśyante tāni tānyeva tathā bhāvā yugādiṣu
كما أن علامات الفصول المميِّزة تظهر بأشكال شتّى مع دوران الدورة—ومع ذلك فهي هي بعينها علامات تلك الفصول—كذلك تتكرر أحوال الوجود في اليوغات وسائر أقسام الزمان.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing the sages/Indradyumna on cyclical time (yuga-parivarta)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
By stressing the recurrence of changing conditions (bhāvas) across time, the verse implies that what is truly stable is not the transient cycle but the witnessing principle beyond it—Atman—unchanged while phenomena repeat in yuga after yuga.
The verse supports yogic steadiness (sthiti) and viveka: observe recurring patterns of change like seasons without attachment. In the Kurma Purana’s broader synthesis, such insight undergirds devotion to Īśvara (Shiva-Vishnu unity) and disciplined practice aligned with dharma across shifting yugas.
Indirectly: it frames the cosmos as governed by a single sovereign order of time and recurrence, consistent with the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian stance where the same Supreme Lord (Īśvara) is honored through both Shaiva and Vaishnava idioms.