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Shloka 27

एकान्तिधर्म-प्रश्नः (Inquiry into Ekāntin Dharma) / The Origin and Practice of Single-Pointed Nārāyaṇa-Centered Discipline

ये हि ते ऋषय: ख्याता: सप्त चित्रशिखण्डिन:

ye hi te ṛṣayaḥ khyātāḥ sapta citraśikhaṇḍinaḥ—marīciḥ atriḥ aṅgirāḥ pulastyaḥ pulahaḥ kratuḥ ca mahātejā vasiṣṭhaḥ; te merau mahāgirau ekamatāḥ san yat śāstram uttamaṃ pravavocuḥ nirmame ca, tad caturṇāṃ vedānāṃ samam ādaraṇīyaṃ pramāṇabhūtaṃ; tatra saptamukhaiḥ prādurbhūtaḥ lokadharmaḥ suvyākhyātaḥ.

Bhishma said: “The seven renowned sages known as the Citraśikhaṇḍins are Marīci, Atri, Aṅgiras, Pulastya, Pulaha, Kratu, and the radiant Vasiṣṭha. United in purpose upon the great mountain Meru, they proclaimed and composed an excellent treatise—one to be revered and accepted as authoritative, on a par with the four Vedas. In it, the noble dharma of the world was set forth with clarity, as though voiced through seven mouths.”

येwho/which (those)
ये:
Karta
TypePronoun
Rootयद्
FormMasculine, Nominative, Plural
हिindeed/for
हि:
TypeIndeclinable
Rootहि
तेyour/of you
ते:
Sambandha
TypePronoun
Rootयुष्मद्
FormMasculine/Neuter, Genitive, Singular
ऋषयःsages
ऋषयः:
Karta
TypeNoun
Rootऋषि
FormMasculine, Nominative, Plural
ख्याताःrenowned/known
ख्याताः:
TypeAdjective
Rootख्यात
FormMasculine, Nominative, Plural, क्त (past passive participle)
सप्तseven
सप्त:
TypeNumeral
Rootसप्त
FormMasculine, Nominative, Plural (indeclinable numeral used adjectivally)
चित्रशिखण्डिनःthe 'variegated-crested' ones (name/epithet)
चित्रशिखण्डिनः:
Karta
TypeNoun/Adjective
Rootचित्रशिखण्डिन्
FormMasculine, Nominative, Plural

भीष्म उवाच

B
Bhishma (भीष्म)
M
Marichi (मरीचि)
A
Atri (अत्रि)
A
Angiras (अंगिरा/अङ्गिरस्)
P
Pulastya (पुलस्त्य)
P
Pulaha (पुलह)
K
Kratu (क्रतु)
V
Vasistha (वसिष्ठ)
M
Mount Meru (मेरु)
T
the Four Vedas (चत्वारो वेदाः)
Ś
Śāstra/Treatise (शास्त्र)
L
Lokadharma (लोकधर्म)

Educational Q&A

That a dharma-teaching (śāstra) established by unanimously revered sages can function as a reliable authority—comparable in reverence and evidentiary force to the Vedas—especially when it clearly expounds lokadharma, the ethical-social order sustaining the world.

Bhishma identifies seven famous sages called the Citraśikhaṇḍins and describes how, gathered together on Mount Meru, they jointly proclaimed and composed an excellent treatise. He emphasizes its Veda-like authority and notes that it presents a lucid exposition of lokadharma, metaphorically emerging through seven mouths.