Origins of the Maruts — Origins of the Maruts Across the Manvantaras (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)
शुक्रोत्सर्गावसाने तु नृपतिर्भार्यया सह जगाम दिव्यया गत्या ब्रह्मलोकं तपोधन 46.14 तदम्बरात् प्रचलितमभ्रवर्णं शुक्रं समाना नलिनी वपुष्मती चित्रा विशाला हरितालिनी च सप्तर्षिपत्न्यो ददृशुर्यथेच्छया
śukrotsargāvasāne tu nṛpatirbhāryayā saha jagāma divyayā gatyā brahmalokaṃ tapodhana 46.14 tadambarāt pracalitamabhravarṇaṃ śukraṃ samānā nalinī vapuṣmatī citrā viśālā haritālinī ca saptarṣipatnyo dadṛśuryathecchayā
When the emission of semen was completed, the king, together with his wife, went by a divine mode of travel to Brahmaloka, O treasure of austerity. Then that semen, set in motion from the sky and cloud-colored, was seen—according to their will—by the wives of the Seven Ṛṣis: Samānā, Nalinī, Vapuṣmatī, Citrā, Viśālā, and Haritālinī.
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
They are the wives of the Seven Sages (Saptarṣis), a recurring cosmic group in Purāṇic literature. This passage uniquely foregrounds several named wives (Samānā, Nalinī, Vapuṣmatī, Citrā, Viśālā, Haritālinī) as witnesses to the cloud-colored śukra descending from the sky.
Brahmaloka functions as a cosmological destination that elevates the episode from a merely royal/earthly event to a trans-world narrative. The king’s ‘divyā gati’ and arrival in Brahmā’s realm marks the act as having cosmic consequences, preparing for aetiological developments involving celestial beings.
Only cosmography: ‘Brahmaloka’ and the non-terrestrial ‘ambara.’ No terrestrial rivers, lakes, forests, or named tīrthas appear in the provided text, so this unit is better classified as cosmological-itihasa rather than tīrtha-māhātmya.