Manvantaras, Indras, Saptarṣis, and the Seven Sustaining Manifestations; Vyāsa as Nārāyaṇa
रैवते ऽप्यन्तरे चैव संभूत्यां मानसो ऽभवत् / संभूतो मानसैः सार्धं देवैः सह महाद्युतिः
raivate 'pyantare caiva saṃbhūtyāṃ mānaso 'bhavat / saṃbhūto mānasaiḥ sārdhaṃ devaiḥ saha mahādyutiḥ
Também no Manvantara de Raivata, no ciclo presidido por Saṃbhūti, manifestou-se Mānasā; e Saṃbhūta—de grande fulgor—apareceu juntamente com os Mānasas, em companhia dos deuses.
Suta (narrator) recounting Purāṇic chronology to the sages
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Indirectly: by describing “mind-born” (mānasa) manifestations within a Manvantara, it distinguishes changing cosmic appearances from the unchanging Self that underlies all cycles of creation.
No specific practice is taught in this verse; it provides cosmological context that later supports Kurma Purana teachings on Yoga by showing the impermanent, cyclical nature of manifested beings and divine offices.
It does not name Shiva or Vishnu directly; it reflects the Purāṇic framework in which divine manifestations and gods arise within ordered cosmic cycles—later harmonized in the Kurma Purana through Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis.