Adhyaya 47 — Brahma’s Awakening and the Ninefold Scheme of Creation
ततः क्षितिं समीक्ष्य पृथिव्यां सोऽसृजद् गिरिन् ।
प्राक् सर्गे दह्यमाने तु तदा संवर्तकाग्निना ॥
tataḥ kṣitiṃ samīkṛtya pṛthivyāṃ so 'sṛjad girīn /
prāk sarge dahyamāne tu tadā saṃvartakāgninā
Then, having made the ground even, he created mountains upon the earth—whereas in the former creation they were burned at that time by the fire of dissolution.
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The text emphasizes cyclicality: forms perish in saṃvarta and reappear in pratisarga; this supports a worldview of impermanence of structures yet continuity of cosmic law.
Pratisarga: reconstruction of terrestrial features (girayaḥ) after pralaya is a classic re-creation element.
Mountains represent fixed ‘granthi’-like structures (stabilities) arising after the leveling of undifferentiated terrain—symbolic of differentiation after dissolution.