Devotpatti-nirūpaṇa — Hari’s Pūrṇatva
Completeness) and the Ritual Doctrine of Sāra (Essence
अण्डश्च पूर्णो ह्यण्डरोमाणि कक्षाश्चक्षुश्च श्रोत्रे सर्व एते च पूर्णाः / किं वर्णये मूलरूपं हरेश्च यावद्वलं पूर्णं समग्रदेहे
aṇḍaśca pūrṇo hyaṇḍaromāṇi kakṣāścakṣuśca śrotre sarva ete ca pūrṇāḥ / kiṃ varṇaye mūlarūpaṃ hareśca yāvadvalaṃ pūrṇaṃ samagradehe
宇宙之卵圆满充盈;卵上的毫毛、腋下、双眼与双耳——一切皆具足无缺。我还能如何描绘哈利(Hari)的本初之相?在祂全身之中,力量与圆满皆以全量具现。
Lord Vishnu (Hari), in discourse to Garuda (Vinata-putra)
Concept: Pūrṇatva: Hari’s form is complete in every limb; the cosmos is not outside Him.
Vedantic Theme: Brahman as pūrṇa; immanence (antaryāmitva) and non-separateness of world from the divine ground.
Application: Contemplate the divine as all-pervading completeness; cultivate reverence and steadiness rather than deficiency-thinking.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: cosmic-structure
Related Themes: Garuda Purana (Brahma-khanda/ācāra portions): praise of Nārāyaṇa’s all-pervasion (general thematic parallel)
This verse uses the Brahmāṇḍa as a symbol of totality, stressing that the cosmos is a complete manifestation and that Hari’s primordial form is likewise perfect and all-encompassing.
It emphasizes Hari’s mūla-rūpa (primordial form) as inherently complete—every aspect of His being is described as pūrṇa, implying divine wholeness beyond exhaustive description.
Contemplate completeness (pūrṇatva) in spiritual practice—reduce anxiety rooted in “lack,” and cultivate steadiness through remembrance of the divine as whole and sustaining.