मार्कण्डेय उदाच हन्त ते वर्णयिष्यामि नमस्कृत्वा स्वयम्भुवे । पुरुषाय पुराणाय शाश्वतायाव्ययाय च
Mārkaṇḍeya uvāca: hanta te varṇayiṣyāmi namaskṛtvā svayambhuve | puruṣāya purāṇāya śāśvatāyāvyayāya ca ||
Mārkaṇḍeya disse: “Pois bem—ouve; eu te descreverei. Tendo primeiro me curvado em reverência ao Senhor Auto-nascido, ao Purusha Primordial—eterno e imperecível—então começarei.”
वैशम्पायन उवाच
Before transmitting sacred or morally weighty knowledge, the speaker grounds the narration in reverence to the eternal, imperishable source of order (Svayambhū/Puruṣa). The verse models humility, legitimacy of speech, and the ethical discipline of beginning discourse with remembrance of the highest principle.
Mārkaṇḍeya prepares to begin a detailed account. He signals readiness (“hanta”), addresses the listener directly (“to you”), and performs an invocation—bowing to the Self-born, primeval, eternal, undecaying Puruṣa—thereby framing the forthcoming narration as sacred and authoritative.