Previous Verse
Next Verse

Shloka 15

Adhyaya 73 — त्रिपुरदाहे ब्रह्मस्तवः

Brahmā’s Hymn in the Context of Tripura’s Burning

गुणत्रयं चतुर्धाख्यम् अहङ्कारं च सुव्रताः तन्मात्राणि च भूतानि तथा बुद्धीन्द्रियाणि च

guṇatrayaṃ caturdhākhyam ahaṅkāraṃ ca suvratāḥ tanmātrāṇi ca bhūtāni tathā buddhīndriyāṇi ca

హే సువ్రతా, (ప్రకృతినుండి) త్రిగుణాలు, చతుర్విధ అహంకారం, తन्मాత్రలు, భూతాలు, అలాగే బుద్ధి-ఇంద్రియాలు కూడా ఉద్భవిస్తాయి.

गुणत्रयम्the triad of guṇas (sattva–rajas–tamas)
गुणत्रयम्:
चतुर्धा-आख्यम्described as fourfold
चतुर्धा-आख्यम्:
अहङ्कारम्ego-principle (ahaṅkāra)
अहङ्कारम्:
and
:
सुव्रताःO you who are of good vows / disciplined ones
सुव्रताः:
तन्मात्राणिsubtle elements (sound, touch, form, taste, smell)
तन्मात्राणि:
and
:
भूतानिgross elements (earth, water, fire, air, ether)
भूतानि:
तथाlikewise
तथा:
बुद्धीन्द्रियाणिcognitive organs / organs of knowing (jñānendriyas)
बुद्धीन्द्रियाणि:
and
:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya, summarizing the cosmological tattvas in the Linga Purana’s Shaiva framework)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It maps the manifest constituents—guṇas, ahaṅkāra, tanmātras, bhūtas, and indriyas—that must be purified and transcended; Linga worship is presented as a Shaiva means to loosen paśa (bondage) and turn the paśu (soul) toward Pati (Śiva).

By listing the evolutes of Prakṛti, the verse implicitly distinguishes Śiva as Pati—beyond these categories—who governs and liberates the soul from identification with guṇas, ego, senses, and elements.

Tattva-viveka (discriminative insight) central to Pāśupata-oriented practice: observing guṇas, ego, and sense-functions as objects, offering them inwardly to the Linga (Śiva), and cultivating detachment that supports mantra-japa, dhyāna, and śiva-pūjā.