Daksha’s Sacrifice and the Origin of Kapalin Rudra (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)
शृणुष्वावहितो भूत्वा कथामेतां पुरातनीम् प्रोक्तमादिपुराणे च ब्रह्मणाव्यक्तमूर्त्तिना
śṛṇuṣvāvahito bhūtvā kathāmetāṃ purātanīm proktamādipurāṇe ca brahmaṇāvyaktamūrttinā
सावध होऊन ही प्राचीन कथा ऐक; आदिपुराणातही अव्यक्तमूर्ती ब्रह्म्याने ती सांगितली आहे।
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The verse foregrounds śravaṇa (attentive listening) as the proper method for receiving Purāṇic knowledge, and it asserts the antiquity/authority of the account by tracing it to Brahmā—suggesting that cosmological truths are best approached through disciplined reception rather than casual curiosity.
This functions as a gateway into Sarga/Pratisarga material: it introduces a primordial account (purātanī kathā) typically used to set up descriptions of dissolution and subsequent re-creation.
Brahmā described as 'avyakta-mūrti' points to the liminal condition around dissolution/creation where manifest forms recede; knowledge is presented as continuous even when forms are not—linking cosmology with epistemic continuity.