HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 46Shloka 56
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Shloka 56

Origins of the MarutsOrigins of the Maruts Across the Manvantaras (Pulastya–Narada Dialogue)

तामसस्यान्तरे ये च मरुतो ऽप्यभवन् पुरा तानहं कीर्तयिष्यामि गीतनृत्यकलिप्रिय

tāmasasyāntare ye ca maruto 'pyabhavan purā tānahaṃ kīrtayiṣyāmi gītanṛtyakalipriya

تَامَس منو کے منونتر میں جو مرُت پہلے موجود تھے، میں اب اُن کا بیان کروں گا، اے گیت و رقص اور کھیل کے شوقین۔

Narrator/teacher voice addressing the listener with an epithet (“fond of song and dance”); exact named interlocutors not explicit in the excerpt.
Maruts
Purāṇic recitation style (kīrtana)Manvantara succession (Tāmasa)Cataloguing deity-classes

{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

Purāṇic narration frequently uses affectionate epithets to maintain a performative, oral-recitation atmosphere. It frames the cosmological catalogue as a ‘kīrtana’—a proclaimed tradition—rather than a dry list.

In this compound (gīta-nṛtya-kali-priya), kali is best read as ‘sport, play, amusement’—a common sense of kali in classical Sanskrit—rather than the specific cosmic age (Kali-yuga).

The text is moving sequentially through Manvantaras, indicating that each Manu’s era has distinct sets of Maruts. This supports the Purāṇic model of cyclical cosmic administration.