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VERŠ 2

TEXT 2

Verš

Text

bhavāpyayau hi bhūtānāṁ
śrutau vistaraśo mayā
tvattaḥ kamala-patrākṣa
māhātmyam api cāvyayam
bhavāpyayau hi bhūtānāṁ
śrutau vistaraśo mayā
tvattaḥ kamala-patrākṣa
māhātmyam api cāvyayam

Synonyma

Synonyms

bhava — vznik; apyayau — zánik; hi — zaiste; bhūtānām — všetkých živých bytostí; śrutau — počul; vistaraśaḥ — podrobnosti; mayā — mnou; tvattaḥ — od Teba; kamala-patra-akṣa — s lotosovými očami; māhātmyam — sláva; api — tiež; ca — a; avyayam — nevyčerpateľná.

bhava — appearance; apyayau — disappearance; hi — certainly; bhūtānām — of all living entities; śrutau — have been heard; vistaraśaḥ — in detail; mayā — by me; tvattaḥ — from You; kamala-patra-akṣa — O lotus-eyed one; māhātmyam — glories; api — also; ca — and; avyayam — inexhaustible.

Překlad

Translation

Ó, Pane s lotosovými očami, od Teba som sa podrobne dozvedel o vzniku a zániku všetkých živých tvorov a uvedomil som si Tvoju bezmedznú moc.

O lotus-eyed one, I have heard from You in detail about the appearance and disappearance of every living entity and have realized Your inexhaustible glories.

Význam

Purport

Arjuna vo svojej radosti oslovuje Kṛṣṇu slovami: „Ó, Pane s lotosovými očami“ (Kṛṣṇove oči sa podobajú na okvetné lístky lotosu), pretože Kṛṣṇa ho v predchádzajúcich kapitolách uisťuje: ahaṁ kṛtsnasya jagataḥ prabhavaḥ pralasyas tathā. „Som zdrojom vzniku a zániku celého hmotného stvorenia.“ (Bg.7.6.). Kṛṣṇa to Arjunovi podrobne vysvetlil. Arjuna vie aj to, že je všeprestupujúci, aj keď osobne všade prítomný nie je. Arjuna priznáva, že plne pochopil túto nepochopiteľnú Kṛṣṇovu vlastnosť.

Arjuna addresses Lord Kṛṣṇa as “lotus-eyed” (Kṛṣṇa’s eyes appear just like the petals of a lotus flower) out of his joy, for Kṛṣṇa has assured him, in a previous chapter, ahaṁ kṛtsnasya jagataḥ prabhavaḥ pralayas tathā: “I am the source of the appearance and disappearance of this entire material manifestation.” Arjuna has heard of this from the Lord in detail. Arjuna further knows that in spite of His being the source of all appearances and disappearances, He is aloof from them. As the Lord has said in the Ninth Chapter, He is all-pervading, yet He is not personally present everywhere. That is the inconceivable opulence of Kṛṣṇa which Arjuna admits that he has thoroughly understood.