HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 154Shloka 69
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Shloka 69

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

भर्त्सयिष्यति तां देवीं ततः सा कुपिता सती प्रयास्यति तपश्चर्तुं तत्तस्मात्तपसे पुनः //

bhartsayiṣyati tāṃ devīṃ tataḥ sā kupitā satī prayāsyati tapaścartuṃ tattasmāttapase punaḥ //

He will rebuke that goddess; then she—Sati, angered—will set out to undertake austerities. Therefore she will again resort to tapas.

bhartsayiṣyatiwill scold/rebuke
bhartsayiṣyati:
tāmher
tām:
devīmthe goddess
devīm:
tataḥthen/thereafter
tataḥ:
she
:
kupitāenraged/offended
kupitā:
satīthe virtuous lady (Sati)
satī:
prayāsyatiwill depart/set forth
prayāsyati:
tapaḥausterity/penance
tapaḥ:
cartumto practice/to perform
cartum:
tasmāttherefore/from that cause
tasmāt:
tapasefor austerity/into penance
tapase:
punaḥagain
punaḥ:
Lord Matsya (narrating the future course of events to Vaivasvata Manu)
DevīSatī
TapasDevīPuranic NarrativeDharmaMarital Conflict

FAQs

This verse does not describe pralaya or cosmology; it focuses on a moral-narrative turning point where an insult leads the Devī (Sati) to undertake tapas.

It implicitly warns against harsh speech and disrespect toward the virtuous (especially women and the divine), showing how rebuke can trigger rupture and withdrawal into asceticism—an ethical lesson relevant to household harmony and royal conduct.

No Vāstu or temple-building rule is stated here; the ritual takeaway is the emphasis on tapas (austerity) as a purificatory and transformative religious practice following offense or conflict.