Adhyaya 16 — The Son’s Counsel on Renunciation and the Anasuya–Mandavya Episode: The Suspension of Sunrise and the Power of Pativrata
इति श्रीमार्कण्डेयपुराणे पितापुत्रसंवादो नाम पञ्चदशोऽध्यायः ।
षोडशोऽध्यायः पितावाच कथितं मे त्वया वत्स संसारस्य व्यवस्थितम् ।
स्वरूपमतीहेयस्य घटीयन्त्रवदव्ययम् ॥
iti śrīmārkaṇḍeyapurāṇe pitāputrasaṃvādo nāma pañcadaśo 'dhyāyaḥ | ṣoḍaśo 'dhyāyaḥ pitāvāca kathitaṃ me tvayā vatsa saṃsārasya vyavasthitam | svarūpam atiheyasya ghaṭīyantravad avyayam ||
ดังนี้ ในศรีมารกัณฑेयปุราณะ บทที่สิบห้าชื่อว่า “ปิตา–บุตรสนทนา” ยุติลงแล้ว บทที่สิบหก: บิดากล่าวว่า “ลูกที่รัก เจ้าได้อธิบายแก่ข้าพเจ้าแล้วถึงการดำเนินอันเป็นระเบียบของสังสาระ—สภาพที่ข้ามพ้นได้ยาก ไม่ขาดสาย ดุจกลไกนาฬิกาน้ำ”
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Saṃsāra is presented as lawful and repetitive—like a clockwork—implying that ethical action (dharma) is the rational response to a structured moral universe, not a chaotic one.
This is framing and reflective commentary rather than one of the five marks; it supports the Purāṇa’s didactic function that contextualizes cosmology and genealogy within lived moral reality.
The water-clock metaphor suggests time-bound compulsion: beings revolve in cycles until insight breaks identification with the mechanism. ‘Hard to cross’ implies the need for jñāna and vairāgya in addition to ritual merit.