HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 150Shloka 177
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Shloka 177

Matsya Purana — War of Devas and Dānavas: Yama and Kubera Defeated; Kālanemi’s Māyā and the A...

अभवत्कल्पमेघाभः स्फुरद्भूरिशतह्रदः गम्भीरास्फोटनिर्ह्रादजगद्धृदयघट्टकः //

abhavatkalpameghābhaḥ sphuradbhūriśatahradaḥ gambhīrāsphoṭanirhrādajagaddhṛdayaghaṭṭakaḥ //

It became like a cloud at the end of an age—flashing with countless hundreds of eddying pools—its deep, bursting roar striking and churning as though it were pounding the very heart of the world.

abhavatbecame
abhavat:
kalpa-meghābhaḥresembling the age-ending (kalpa) cloud
kalpa-meghābhaḥ:
sphuratflashing, heaving, surging
sphurat:
bhūriabundant, innumerable
bhūri:
śatahundreds
śata:
hradaḥpools, lakes, deep eddies
hradaḥ:
gambhīradeep, profound
gambhīra:
āsphoṭabursting, crashing (as of waves)
āsphoṭa:
nirhrādaloud roar, reverberation
nirhrāda:
jagatthe world, cosmos
jagat:
hṛdayaheart, core
hṛdaya:
ghaṭṭakaḥstriker, pounder, that which batters/churns
ghaṭṭakaḥ:
Sūta (narrator) describing the Pralaya-like upheaval within the Matsya Purana’s deluge narrative
PralayaKalpaCosmic Ocean / Flood Waters
PralayaDelugeCosmic dissolutionPuranic imageryMatsya Purana flood narrative

FAQs

It uses Pralaya imagery—kalpa-ending clouds, violent surging waters, and world-shaking roar—to convey dissolution as a cosmic-scale turbulence that seems to batter the very ‘heart’ (core) of the universe.

Indirectly, it frames impermanence and catastrophic change as real forces in the Purana’s worldview—supporting the ethical emphasis that rulers and householders should cultivate dharma, preparedness, and humility rather than complacency amid prosperity.

No direct Vāstu or ritual rule is stated; the takeaway is symbolic: sacred architecture and rites in the Matsya Purana are often justified as stabilizing, dharmic responses to cosmic instability and dissolution imagery like this.