HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 154Shloka 2

Shloka 2

Matsya Purana — The Strategy to Defeat Tāraka: Pārvatī’s Birth

उवाचानाविलं वाक्यम् अल्पाक्षरपरिस्फुटम् दैत्येन्द्रमर्कवृन्दानां बिभ्रतं भास्वरं वपुः //

uvācānāvilaṃ vākyam alpākṣaraparisphuṭam daityendramarkavṛndānāṃ bibhrataṃ bhāsvaraṃ vapuḥ //

He spoke words that were unclouded—few in syllables yet perfectly clear—while bearing a radiant form, resplendent like the lord of the Daityas amid a circle of suns.

uvācaspoke
uvāca:
anāvilamuntroubled, unconfused, clear
anāvilam:
vākyamspeech, statement
vākyam:
alpākṣarawith few syllables, concise
alpākṣara:
parisphuṭamfully manifest, distinctly articulated
parisphuṭam:
daityendralord of the Daityas (chief demon-king)
daityendra:
arkasun
arka:
vṛndānāmof multitudes/circles/assemblies
vṛndānām:
bibhratambearing, possessing
bibhratam:
bhāsvaramshining, radiant
bhāsvaram:
vapuḥbody, form
vapuḥ:
Narrator (Sūta/Itihāsa-style narrative voice introducing a figure’s speech)
DaityendraArka (Sun)
PralayaDialogueDaityasEpic-style narrationRadiance/Tejas

FAQs

Indirectly, it sets the narrative tone for the Pralaya-related discourse: the speaker’s words are portrayed as concise and crystal-clear, a typical framing used before major teachings in the deluge cycle.

It highlights an ethical ideal of speech valued in Purāṇic instruction—clarity, restraint, and precision—qualities expected of rulers and householders when giving counsel, judgments, or ritual directions.

No explicit Vāstu/ritual procedure is stated in this verse; its practical takeaway is the emphasis on precise, unambiguous instruction—an essential requirement in ritual manuals and Vāstu prescriptions elsewhere in the Matsya Purāṇa.