HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 2Shloka 8
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Shloka 8

Matsya Purana — Intermediate Dissolution

संवर्तो भीमनादश्च द्रोणश्चण्डो बलाहकः विद्युत्पताकः शोणस्तु सप्तैते लयवारिदाः //

saṃvarto bhīmanādaśca droṇaścaṇḍo balāhakaḥ vidyutpatākaḥ śoṇastu saptaite layavāridāḥ //

سمورت، بھیم ناد، درون، چنڈ، بلاہک، ودیوت پَتاک اور شوṇ—یہ ساتوں لَے (پرلَے) کے جلَد، یعنی بارش لانے والے بادل ہیں، جو کائناتی فنا کے وقت سیلاب برساتے ہیں۔

saṃvartaḥSaṃvarta (name of a pralaya-cloud)
saṃvartaḥ:
bhīmanādaḥBhīmanāda, ‘terrible-roaring’ (name of a cloud)
bhīmanādaḥ:
droṇaḥDroṇa (name of a cloud
droṇaḥ:
caṇḍaḥCaṇḍa, ‘fierce’ (name of a cloud)
caṇḍaḥ:
balāhakaḥBalāhaka, ‘cloud’ (here a specific named cloud)
balāhakaḥ:
vidyutpatākaḥVidyutpatāka, ‘having lightning as its banner’ (name of a cloud)
vidyutpatākaḥ:
śoṇaḥŚoṇa, ‘reddish’ (name of a cloud)
śoṇaḥ:
saptaseven
sapta:
etethese
ete:
layadissolution, pralaya
laya:
vāridāḥwater-givers, rain-clouds
vāridāḥ:
Lord Matsya (Vishnu) instructing Vaivasvata Manu (contextual attribution for early Pralaya chapters)
SaṃvartaBhīmanādaDroṇaCaṇḍaBalāhakaVidyutpatākaŚoṇaPralaya
PralayaDelugeCosmologyMatsya-AvataraPuranic-Clouds

FAQs

It identifies seven specific “dissolution-clouds” (laya-vāridāḥ) that unleash the pralaya rains, portraying cosmic dissolution as a structured, named set of forces rather than a random catastrophe.

Indirectly, it supports the Purāṇic ethic of preparedness and humility: rulers and householders should recognize impermanence and align life with dharma, since even the world-order can be withdrawn through pralaya.

No direct Vāstu or ritual procedure is stated; the verse is cosmological. Its practical takeaway is contextual—temples/rites are framed within cyclical time, where pralaya marks the limits of worldly constructions.