Heat
Created by Jijith Nadumuri at 25 Feb 2010 16:46 and updated at 25 Feb 2010 16:46
Mahabharata: 18 Parvas
MAHABHARATA NOUN
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Mbh.2.11.435 | And Daksha, Prachetas, Pulaha, Marichi, the master Kasyapa, Bhrigu, Atri, and Vasistha and Gautama, and also Angiras, and Pulastya, Kraut, Prahlada, and Kardama, these Prajapatis, and Angirasa of the Atharvan Veda, the Valikhilyas, the Marichipas; Intelligence, Space, Knowledge, Air, Heat, Water, Earth, Sound, Touch, Form, Taste, Scent; Nature, and the Modes of Nature, and the elemental and prime causes of the world, all stay in that mansion beside the lord Brahma. |
Mbh.12.184.11117 | Heat resides within the head brain and protects the body from perishing. |
Mbh.12.209.12711 | From the Wind proceeds Heat. |
Mbh.12.209.12712 | From Heat proceeds Water, and from Water is produced the Earth. |
Mbh.12.232.14433 | Then the attribute of water is taken by Heat, and losing its own attribute, water finds rest in that element. |
Mbh.12.232.14436 | Then Wind comes and takes the attribute, viz, form of Heat or Light, which thereupon becomes extinguished, yielding to Wind, which, possessed of great might, begins to be awfully agitated. |
Mbh.12.251.15382 | Heat, the digestive fire in the stomach, light that discovers all things, the warmth that is in the body, and eye counted as the fifth, are all of light which has form of diverse colours for its attribute. |
Mbh.12.274.16808 | Water, Space, Earth, Wind, and Heat, these are those five essences. |
Mbh.12.301.18872 | The Waters have Heat or fire for their refuge. |
Mbh.12.301.18873 | Heat attaches itself to the Wind; and the wind has Space for its refuge; and Space has Mahat for its refuge, and Mahat has the Understanding for its foundation. |
Mbh.12.344.22841 | It is from Him that Heat or Light having the attribute of form or vision has arisen. |
Mbh.12.347.22999 | Water then merges into Heat, and Heat into Wind. |
Jijith Nadumuri Ravi
Research data published for the interest of people researching on Mahabharata.
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Reference:- Mahabharata of Krishna Dwaipayana Vyasa, translated to English by Kisari Mohan Ganguli; Source of Plain Text: www.sacred-texts.com; Wikified at AncientVoice. |
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