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Shloka 88

Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma

एतदेव तु सर्वेषां युगानां लक्षणं स्मृतम् एषां चतुर्युगाणां च गुणिता ह्येकसप्ततिः

etadeva tu sarveṣāṃ yugānāṃ lakṣaṇaṃ smṛtam eṣāṃ caturyugāṇāṃ ca guṇitā hyekasaptatiḥ

ఇదే అన్ని యుగాల లక్షణమని స్మరించబడింది. అలాగే ఈ చతుర్యుగాల మొత్తం సంఖ్య సమాహారంగా డెబ్బై ఒకటి అని చెప్పబడింది.

etatthis
etat:
evaindeed/alone
eva:
tubut/indeed
tu:
sarveṣāmof all
sarveṣām:
yugānāmof the yugas (world-ages)
yugānām:
lakṣaṇamcharacteristic/defining mark
lakṣaṇam:
smṛtamremembered/traditionally taught
smṛtam:
eṣāmof these
eṣām:
caturyugāṇāmof the four-yuga cycles (caturyugas)
caturyugāṇām:
caand
ca:
guṇitāmultiplied/totaled/reckoned
guṇitā:
hiindeed
hi:
ekasaptatiḥseventy-one
ekasaptatiḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating the Linga Purana chronology to the sages of Naimisharanya)

S
Shiva

FAQs

By defining yuga-marks and the count of caturyugas, the verse frames time as a measurable power within creation—yet Shiva, worshipped as the Linga (Pati), is taught as the one who stands beyond time and stabilizes dharma across ages.

Even while discussing yugas, the Shaiva implication is that time (kāla) is part of the cosmic order, whereas Shiva-tattva is the transcendent Pati who is not diminished by yuga-change and who grants liberation from time-bound limitation.

No specific puja-vidhi is stated here; the takeaway is contemplative: in Pashupata Yoga, the sādhaka recognizes the pasha of time and seeks steadiness in Shiva (Linga-dhyāna) to move toward freedom from temporal bondage.