HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 2Shloka 21
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Matsya Purana — Intermediate Dissolution, Shloka 21

यद्भवद्भिः पुरा पृष्टः सृष्ट्यादिकमहं द्विजाः तद् एवैकार्णवे तस्मिन् मनुः पप्रच्छ केशवम् //

yadbhavadbhiḥ purā pṛṣṭaḥ sṛṣṭyādikamahaṃ dvijāḥ tad evaikārṇave tasmin manuḥ papraccha keśavam //

ஓ இருபிறப்புடைய முனிவர்களே, நீங்கள் முன்பு என்னிடம் கேட்ட படைப்பு முதலிய விஷயத்தையே, அந்த ஒரே பேர்கடல் (ஏகார்ணவ) காலத்தில் மனு கேசவனை (விஷ்ணுவை) வினவினார்।

yadthat which
yad:
bhavadbhiḥby you (honored ones)
bhavadbhiḥ:
purāformerly/earlier
purā:
pṛṣṭaḥasked/inquired
pṛṣṭaḥ:
sṛṣṭi-ādikamcreation and the rest (origination, dissolution, etc.)
sṛṣṭi-ādikam:
ahamI
aham:
dvijāḥO twice-born (brāhmaṇa) sages
dvijāḥ:
tat evathat very (same)
tat eva:
ekārṇavein the one ocean / at the time of the single flood-like ocean
ekārṇave:
tasminin that (situation/time)
tasmin:
manuḥManu (Vaivasvata Manu)
manuḥ:
papracchaasked/inquired
papraccha:
keśavamKeśava (Viṣṇu, Lord Matsya in context).
keśavam:
Sūta (narrator) addressing the assembled dvijas (sages)
ManuKeśava (Viṣṇu / Lord Matsya by context)Dvijas (sages)
CreationPralayaMatsya-AvataraManuPuranic Dialogue

FAQs

It frames the teaching as arising in the ekārṇava—an all-engulfing ocean condition associated with pralaya—where Manu asks Viṣṇu about creation and allied cosmological topics.

Indirectly: it establishes Manu (the archetypal lawgiver and ruler) as receiving foundational cosmological knowledge from Viṣṇu, which underpins later dharma-guidance for governance and right living.

None explicitly in this verse; it is a narrative bridge introducing a cosmological inquiry rather than Vāstu or ritual procedure.