Re: thiru mazhisai aazhvaar and sivavaakkiyar
From the Bhakti List Archives
• December 28, 1995
On Dec 27, 2:01pm, Badrinarayanan Seshadri wrote: > thiru mazhisai aazhvaar uses numbers all over his poems > which needs careful study: > > > aaRum aaRum aaRumaay or ainthum ainthum ainthumaay, > ERuseer iraNdum moonRum Ezhum aaRum ettumaay, > vERu vERu NYaanam aagi meyyinodu poyyumaay, > ooRodu Osaiyaaya ainthum aaya aaya maayanE! (TCV - 2) > [...] > > Rough literal meaning goes like: > > Oh Lord with magical powers born in a shepherd family! You became (?) > a six, a six and another six, a five, a five and another five > in syllables, a two, a three, a seven, a six and an eight > You became of various knowledge, truth and even falsehood too > and all the people and the sound, and a five as well !! K.C. Varadachari translated this paasuram in his book ``Alvars of South India'', published by Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan. He does not mention the source for his interpretation, so some of this may not be traditional, but it is plausible. Being the six 1 the six 2 and the six 3 being (worshipped) by the five, 4 the five 5 and the five 6 He who is the excellent two, 7 the three 8 the seven 9 the six 10 and the eight 11 having made distinct the knowledge 12 being the True and the Untrue 13 the Self of the five 14 He is the Lord, the magician 15 By line: 1. The six are said to be the duties: adhyayanam, adhyaapanam, yajanam, yaajanam, daanam and pratigrahaNam. (Manu, I.88 ff) 2. The six are said to be the seasons: vasanta, grIshma, varsha, Sarat, hemanta, and SiSira. 3. The six refer to the yaagas such as aagneya, jyotishToma, viSvajit, etc. 4. The five are said to be the yajnas: bhUta, manuSya, pitR, deva, and brahma. Manu III.70 adds a sixth, mahAyajna. 5. The five are said to be prANahutis. It may refer to the five prANas -- prANa, apAna, vyAna, udAna and samAna. 6. These are the five agni-s, gArhapatya, Ahavaniya, dakshiNa, sabhdya, and avasatya. 7. The two are said to be God-knowledge and renunication of all the rest. But see Manu IV.4-5 which mention Rtam and amRtam (or satyam) as the characteristics of the Divine. 8. The three are said to be lordship, liberation, and realization, but more truly the three may be said to be creation, sustention, and withdrawal or destruction. (Brahma-Sutras: janmAdy asya yatah, I.i.2. 9. The seven are said to refer the co-requisites of bhakti-yoga, i.e., practice of viveka, vimoka, abhyAsa, kriyA, kalyANa, anuddharsha, and anavasAda. (Sribhashya, I.i.1) 10. The six refer to jnAna, bala, aiSvarya, vIrya, Sakti, and tejas. These six attributes are preeminent among the kalyAna-guNas of the Lord. 11. The eight qualities refer to svarUpa of the Divine described in BrhadAraNyaka Upanishad: apahatapApma (freedom from sin), vijara (freedom from age), vimRtyu, (freedom from death), viSoka (freedom from sorrow), vijigIsa, (freedom from hunger), avipASa (freedom from thirst), satyakAma (desires are true), satyasankalpa (whose will is true). This also may refer to the eight qualities of Brahman from the Isa Upanishad. 12. As Isa 8 puts it, one perceives the real nature of things. 13. Revealing the good to the good and the bad to the bad. 14. Reference may be to the previous verse, where the five elements are mentioned, or to the five-fold manifestation of the Lord as para, vyuha, vibhava, arca, and antaryamin. Mani
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