Brahmā’s Lotus-Birth, the Sealing of the Cosmic Womb, and the Epiphany of Parameśvara
Hari–Hara Samanvaya
श्रुत्वा नारायणो वाक्यं ब्रह्मणो लोकतन्त्रिणः / सान्त्वपूर्वमिदं वाक्यं बभाषे मधुरं हरिः
śrutvā nārāyaṇo vākyaṃ brahmaṇo lokatantriṇaḥ / sāntvapūrvamidaṃ vākyaṃ babhāṣe madhuraṃ hariḥ
فلما سمع نارايَنا، هَري، كلامَ براهما—قيّمَ نظامِ العالم—تكلّم بكلامٍ لطيفٍ عذبٍ يقصد به تسليته.
Suta (narrator) describing Narayana’s response to Brahma
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Indirectly: Nārāyaṇa is portrayed as the compassionate, order-sustaining Supreme who responds with reassurance—hinting that the highest reality is not merely power, but conscious governance (dharma) and grace.
No specific technique is taught in this verse; it establishes the Purāṇic teaching style where spiritual instruction is framed through calm, sattvic speech—an ethical foundation supportive of Yoga (restraint, reassurance, steadiness of mind).
While Śiva is not named here, the verse models the Kurma Purana’s harmonizing tone: the Supreme (Hari/Nārāyaṇa) upholds cosmic order and consoles the creator, a narrative posture consistent with the text’s broader Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis.