अव्यक्त-मानस-सृष्टिवादः
Doctrine of Creation from the Unmanifest ‘Mānasa’
पिड्नला बोली--मेरे सच्चे प्रियतम चिरकालसे मेरे निकट ही रहते हैं। मैं सदासे उनके साथ ही रहती आयी हूँ। वे कभी उन्मत्त नहीं होते; परंतु मैं ऐसी मतवाली हो गयी थी कि आजसे पहले उन्हें पहचान ही न सकी ।।
ekasthūṇaṁ navadvāram apidhāsyāmy agārakam | kā hi kāntam ihāyāntam ayaṁ kānta iti maṁsyate ||
The Brāhmaṇa said: “This body is like a small house with a single pillar and nine gates. I shall shut it up and restrain it. For who, seeing the beloved arriving here, would still think, ‘This is my beloved’—when the true Beloved is not the outward form but the indwelling Self?”
ब्राह्मण उवाच
The verse urges discernment between the outer, sense-bound body and the true inner reality. By ‘closing the nine gates’ it points to restraint of the senses and turning inward, so that one does not mistake external appearances for the true ‘beloved’—the abiding Self.
In the Brahmin’s discourse, the body is described as a small house with nine openings. The speaker resolves to ‘shut’ or restrain this house—symbolizing withdrawal from sense-objects—and questions the common delusion of identifying the beloved with what merely appears outwardly, instead of recognizing the deeper indwelling presence.