Priyavrata Accepts Kingship by Brahmā’s Instruction; Sapta-dvīpa Formation and Renunciation
यावदवभासयति सुरगिरिमनुपरिक्रामन् भगवानादित्यो वसुधातलमर्धेनैव प्रतपत्यर्धेनावच्छादयति तदा हि भगवदुपासनोपचितातिपुरुषप्रभावस्तदनभिनन्दन् समजवेन रथेन ज्योतिर्मयेन रजनीमपि दिनं करिष्यामीति सप्तकृत्वस्तरणिमनुपर्यक्रामद् द्वितीय इव पतङ्ग: ॥ ३० ॥
yāvad avabhāsayati sura-girim anuparikrāman bhagavān ādityo vasudhā-talam ardhenaiva pratapaty ardhenāvacchādayati tadā hi bhagavad-upāsanopacitāti-puruṣa-prabhāvas tad anabhinandan samajavena rathena jyotirmayena rajanīm api dinaṁ kariṣyāmīti sapta-kṛt vastaraṇim anuparyakrāmad dvitīya iva pataṅgaḥ.
当太阳神绕须弥山运行时,只照耀大地的一半,而使另一半被遮蔽于暗处。因礼敬至上人格神而积聚超凡威力的普利耶弗拉塔对此并不满意,遂立誓:“即便在黑夜之处,我也要令其成昼。”于是他乘坐光辉灿然、疾行如一的战车,追随太阳神的轨道七次环行,宛如第二个太阳。
There is a Bengali saying which describes that someone is so powerful that he can make the night day and the day night. That saying is current because of the prowess of Priyavrata. His activities demonstrate how powerful he became by worshiping the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Lord Kṛṣṇa is known as Yogeśvara, the master of all mystic powers. In Bhagavad-gītā (18.78) it is said wherever there is the master of all mystic powers ( yatra yogeśvaraḥ kṛṣṇaḥ ), victory, fortune and all other opulences are present. Devotional service is so powerful. When a devotee achieves what he wants to accomplish, it is not by his own mystic power but by the grace of the master of mystic power, Lord Kṛṣṇa: by His grace, a devotee can accomplish wonderful things unimaginable even to the most powerful scientist.
This verse says Priyavrata, empowered by worship of the Supreme Lord, followed the Sun seven times in a radiant chariot, appearing like a second sun, intending to remove the darkness of night.
Seeing that the Sun lights and heats only part of the earth at a time—leaving the other half in darkness—Priyavrata did not approve of that arrangement and, by his extraordinary potency, tried to extend daylight.
The verse emphasizes that sincere worship and devotion can awaken remarkable inner strength and resolve—encouraging disciplined spiritual practice rather than helplessness in the face of “darkness,” whether literal or personal.