Īśvara-gītā: Antaryāmin, Kāla, and the Divine Ordinance Governing Creation, Preservation, and Pralaya
गन्धर्वा गरुडा ऋक्षाः सिद्धाः साध्याश्चचारणाः / यक्षरक्षः पिशाचाश्च स्थिताः शास्त्रे स्वयंभुवः
gandharvā garuḍā ṛkṣāḥ siddhāḥ sādhyāścacāraṇāḥ / yakṣarakṣaḥ piśācāśca sthitāḥ śāstre svayaṃbhuvaḥ
गन्धर्व, गरुड़, ऋक्ष, सिद्ध, साध्य और चारण; तथा यक्ष, राक्षस और पिशाच—ये सब स्वयंभू के शास्त्र-नियम के अनुसार अपने-अपने स्थान में स्थित हैं।
Sūta (narrator) conveying the Kurma Purana’s cosmological-dharmic account as taught in the tradition
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Indirectly: it presents an ordered cosmos where each class of beings has a fixed station under divine ordinance, implying a higher regulating principle beyond individual forms—consistent with the Purana’s view that the Supreme governs manifestation through śāstra and cosmic law.
No specific practice is taught in this verse; it provides the cosmological backdrop that later supports yogic discipline—Yoga is framed as aligning oneself with the divinely established order (dharma) rather than opposing it.
By emphasizing a single cosmic ordinance establishing all beings, the verse supports the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis: the world-order is ultimately one, even when expressed through Shaiva and Vaishnava theological languages elsewhere in the text.