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Shloka 1

प्रलय-तत्त्वलयः, नीललोहित-रुद्रः, अष्टमूर्तिस्तवः, एवं ब्रह्मणो वैराग्यम्

इति श्रीलिङ्गमहापुराणे पूर्वभागे चतुर्युगपरिमाणं नाम चत्वारिंशो ऽध्यायः इन्द्र उवाच पुनः ससर्ज भगवान् प्रभ्रष्टाः पूर्ववत्प्रजाः सहस्रयुगपर्यन्ते प्रभाते तु पितामहः

iti śrīliṅgamahāpurāṇe pūrvabhāge caturyugaparimāṇaṃ nāma catvāriṃśo 'dhyāyaḥ indra uvāca punaḥ sasarja bhagavān prabhraṣṭāḥ pūrvavatprajāḥ sahasrayugaparyante prabhāte tu pitāmahaḥ

یوں شری لِنگ مہاپُران کے پُروَ بھاگ میں ‘چتُریُگ پریمان’ نامی چالیسواں ادھیائے ختم ہوا۔ اِندر نے کہا—ہزار یُگ پورے ہونے کی صبح پِتامہ بھگوان برہما نے پہلے کی طرح زوال یافتہ مخلوقات کو پھر سے رچا۔

itithus
iti:
śrī-liṅga-mahāpurāṇein the auspicious Liṅga Mahāpurāṇa
śrī-liṅga-mahāpurāṇe:
pūrva-bhāgein the first section (Pūrvabhāga)
pūrva-bhāge:
caturyuga-parimāṇamthe measure/extent of the four yugas
caturyuga-parimāṇam:
nāmanamed
nāma:
catvāriṃśaḥ adhyāyaḥthe fortieth chapter
catvāriṃśaḥ adhyāyaḥ:
indra uvācaIndra said
indra uvāca:
punaḥagain
punaḥ:
sasarjacreated/emitted
sasarja:
bhagavānthe Blessed Lord
bhagavān:
prabhraṣṭāḥfallen away/withdrawn (at dissolution)
prabhraṣṭāḥ:
pūrva-vatas formerly
pūrva-vat:
prajāḥcreatures/subjects
prajāḥ:
sahasra-yuga-paryanteat the end of a thousand yugas
sahasra-yuga-paryante:
prabhāteat dawn
prabhāte:
tuindeed
tu:
pitāmahaḥthe Grandsire (Brahmā).
pitāmahaḥ:

Indra

I
Indra
B
Brahma (Pitamaha)

FAQs

It places Liṅga Purāṇa teaching within the vast cycle of yugas and dissolutions, implying that all manifested forms—including ritual worlds where liṅga-pūjā is performed—arise and subside cyclically, while devotion to Pati (Śiva) is oriented to what transcends these cycles.

Even though Brahmā is named as the recreator, the verse’s cosmological frame aligns with Śaiva Siddhānta: Brahmā functions as an instrumental cause within time, while Shiva-tattva as Pati is the transcendent ground enabling creation, maintenance, and reabsorption beyond the limits of yuga-time.

No specific ritual is prescribed here; the takeaway is contemplative—Pāśupata-oriented vairāgya (dispassion) toward cyclic time (yugas/pralaya) and steadiness in seeking liberation of the paśu from pāśa through devotion and discipline directed to Pati.