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Post by Anne Terri on Feb 4, 2015 16:31:12 GMT 1
3. The Vishn?u Purán?a
3. Vishn?u Purán?a. "That in which Pará?ara, beginning with the events of the Varáha Kalpa, expounds all duties, is called the Vaishn?ava; and the learned know its extent to be twenty-three thousand stanzas 41." The third Purán?a of the lists is that which has been selected for translation, the Vishn?u. It is unnecessary therefore to offer any general summary of its contents, and it will be convenient to reserve any remarks upon its character and probable antiquity for a subsequent page. It may here be observed, however, that the actual number of verses contained in it falls far short of the enumeration of the Matsya, with which the Bhágavata concurs. Its actual contents are not seven thousand stanzas. All the copies, and in this instance they are not fewer than seven in number, procured both in the east and in the west of India, agree; and there is no appearance of any part being wanting. There is a beginning, a middle, and an end, in both text and comment; and the work as it stands is incontestably entire. How is the discrepancy to be explained? FootnotesNot available/Sanskrit
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