Puruṣottama-māhātmya
The Greatness of Puruṣottama Kṣetra
मर्त्यलोके महाश्चर्ये भूमौ कर्मसुदुर्लभे । लोभमोहमहाग्राहे कामक्रोधमहार्णवे ॥ ६० ॥
martyaloke mahāścarye bhūmau karmasudurlabhe | lobhamohamahāgrāhe kāmakrodhamahārṇave || 60 ||
Dans le merveilleux monde des mortels—sur cette terre où l’action juste est si difficile—l’être est saisi par les grands crocodiles de l’avidité et de l’illusion, puis jeté dans l’immense océan du désir et de la colère.
Narada (teaching in a didactic passage within Uttara-Bhaga)
Vrata: none
Rasa: {"primary_rasa":"karuna","secondary_rasa":"bhayanaka","emotional_journey":"A compassionate yet stark diagnosis of saṃsāra: the mortal world’s wonder is undercut by peril—greed/delusion as ‘crocodiles’ and desire/anger as an engulfing ocean."}
It frames earthly life as spiritually precious yet perilous: dharmic karma is difficult, and the chief inner enemies—greed, delusion, desire, and anger—drag the mind away from liberation.
By highlighting the mind’s captivity to kama–krodha and lobha–moha, it implies the need for a saving refuge; in Narada’s teaching, steady devotion and remembrance of Bhagavan (especially Vishnu) becomes the means to cross this “ocean” of passions.
No specific Vedanga (like Vyakarana, Jyotisha, or Kalpa) is directly taught; the practical takeaway is ethical self-discipline—mastery over anger and desire—so that ritual and dharma are not undermined by inner faults.