सोमचक्रः, ग्रह-रथाः, ध्रुवबन्धनं, शिशुमारसंनिवेशः, विष्णु-सर्वात्मकता
Moon, Planets, Dhruva-Tethering, Śiśumāra, and Vishnu as All
एते मया ग्रहाणां वै तवाख्याता रथा नव सर्वे ध्रुवे महाभाग प्रबद्धा वायुरश्मिभिः
ete mayā grahāṇāṃ vai tavākhyātā rathā nava sarve dhruve mahābhāga prabaddhā vāyuraśmibhiḥ
ఇట్లు నేను నీకు గ్రహముల తొమ్మిది రథములను వివరించితిని. ఓ మహాభాగ! అవన్నీ ధ్రువునకు వాయురశ్ములతో బిగిగా బంధింపబడియున్నవి।
Sage Parāśara (speaking to Maitreya)
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: How the grahas’ chariots are arranged and what governs their motion (tethering to Dhruva by wind-rays)
Teaching: Cosmological
Quality: revealing
Cosmic Hierarchy: Lokas
Concept: The heavens move in patterned revolutions because all graha-rathas are bound to Dhruva by subtle ‘wind-rays’, combining motion with stability.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Cultivate an inner ‘dhruva’ (steadfast practice) so life’s movements remain ordered and purposeful.
Vishishtadvaita: Multiplicity (many grahas) remains coordinated through a unifying sustaining principle, reflecting unity-in-difference.
Vishnu Form: Narayana
Bhakti Type: Shanta
In this verse Dhruva functions as the stable cosmic pivot: planetary chariots are described as bound to Dhruva, symbolizing an ordered universe anchored around an unwavering axis.
Parāśara presents the nine planetary ‘chariots’ as being tethered by “vāyu-raśmi” (wind-like rays/cords), conveying that motion occurs through an unseen binding force within a structured cosmic system.
Though Vishnu is not named in this single verse, the described harmony—planets moving yet bound to an axis—reflects the Purāṇic vision of a universe governed by a supreme, sustaining sovereignty (Vishnu as the ultimate ground of order).